National Post

China’s foreign condom frenzy gives boost to Japan

RETAIL

- MONAMI YUI

In Japan, sex- drives have plunged so low that young, libido- challenged men are sometimes referred to as “soushokuke­i- danshi” or herbivore boys.

Think that’s harsh, then consider local condom maker Sagami Rubber Industries Co., battling a shrinking, aging and now increasing­ly frigid Japanese clientele. It’s no wonder then that the company is getting some relief from the popularity its prophylact­ics are enjoying across the sea.

Demand for foreignbra­nd rubbers has surged in China, and its tourists visiting Japan in record numbers are loading up, so much so that Sagami’s thinnest product has sold out. Now the Kanagawa-based company is limiting the volumes it’s dispatchin­g from its remaining product inventory to avoid some shops missing out before the Feb. 8 Lunar New Year, president Ichiro Ohato said.

“Thanks to this inbound business, we’re suddenly facing shortages,” said Ohato, 67, whose grandmothe­r f ounded the business in 1934. “Retailers have been bombarding us with calls every day, telling us they want more and more.”

Chinese consumers are attracted to the “high quality” of Japanese condoms, especially following safety concerns about China- made ones, said Masashi Mori, an equities analyst at Credit Suisse Group AG in Tokyo, in a telephone interview.

Shanghai police seized three million fake condoms made locally from inferior, foul- smelling materials, the People’s Daily reported in April.

About five million people from mainland China visited Japan last year, twice as many as 2014, according to the Japan National Touri sm Organizati­on. That’s bolstered sales of Japanesema­de goods from diapers and feminine- care products to rice cookers and toilet seats.

“Japan has become a shopping mecca for Chinese tourists due to the desire for ‘ Made in Japan’ goods, the unique shopping experience the country provides for Chinese tourists and ... the recent duty- free status now granted to tourists,” said Jared Conway, research manager f or Japan with Euromonito­r Internatio­nal, in an email.

Sagami, Japan’s secondlarg­est condom supplier, is also a beneficiar­y. Its shares surged 137 per cent to 1,071 yen in Tokyo in the first 10 months of last year, while bigger rival Okamoto Industries Inc. climbed 156 per cent to 1,099 yen. Both stocks have since dropped — Sagami to 532 yen and Okamoto to 851 yen — following turmoil in Chinese f i nancial markets and a weakening in the yuan.

Still, Mori said he is optimistic about the long- term prospects f or Japanese condom makers. “If China really does make the transition from investment­s to consumer spending, people are going to want to trade up and use better products,” he said. “So there’s still lots of room for growth.”

To ramp up production, Sagami is expanding one of its two factories in Ipoh, Malaysia. It ’s also planning to build a third factory there to boost output, Ohato said. By spring, he wants to double the volume of extra- thin condoms it produces for the Japanese market to 80 million a year.

These products, made out of 0.02 millimeter-thick polyuretha­ne, sell at retail for twice as much as Sagami’s standard latex offering, going for 1,000 yen ( US$ 8.50) for a six- pack. It ’s Chinese demand f or these more- expensive condoms that have caused the most frequent shortages, Ohato said. It’s also what prompted him to begin distributi­ng them directly in China earlier this month.

China may help Japan-focused Sagami counter a dwindling population and a stagnant domestic economy, not to mention lackluster demand for condoms. While sales of highend polyuretha­ne condoms have helped buoy profit, demand for Sagami’s rubbers peaked in the mid- 1980s, Ohato said.

“Things were on the decline from there, and it’s been terrible since 2000,” he said. “There’s no question that Japanese people are using condoms less and less.”

He continued, “their sex-drive has waned. It’s not like this overseas. It’s really bad in Japan.”

Lovers in Japan are the least amorous, having sex 45 times a year on average, according to the 2005 Durex Global Sex Survey, which polled more t han 317,000 people f r om 41 countries. Greeks, on the other hand, have sex an average of 138 times a year, compared with 96 in China, the survey found.

(JAPANESE PEOPLE’S) SEX DRIVE HAS WANED.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada