The Borneo Post

900 luxury watches ‘go missing' in Japan

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Around 900 luxury watches worth almost US$13 million are missing in Japan after a site renting them out folded and its owner fled to Dubai, local media reported.

The owners of the Rolexes and other pricey timepieces earned monthly deposit fees by loaning them to Osaka-based Toke Match, which would then rent them to customers.

Neo Reverse, the company that operated Toke Match, announced on Jan 31 the terminatio­n of its service and promised it would return all watches.

But the owners of around 900 watches worth 1.9 billion yen (US$12.6 million) have not been reunited with their property, the Asahi Shimbun daily and other media outlets reported, citing a group of about 190 owners.

Some of the watches have even been spotted on an online auction site, prompting owners to file dozens of complaints to police around Japan.

The auction site's operator Valuence Japan told AFP that at least 20 watches it handled had serial numbers matching those loaned to Toke Match.

"We immediatel­y stopped circulatio­n of these watches to prevent further damages from happening" through reselling, a spokeswoma­n said.

Half of the watches were already on the auction site before the Toke Match service was terminated, she said.

The Sharing Economy Associatio­n, Japan said in a statement it had received reports that some of the watches were circulated in second-hand stores too.

The size of Japan's "sharing economy" market is rapidly growing, reaching 2.6 trillion yen (US$17 billion) in the last fiscal year, the associatio­n says.

Neo Reverse was one of around 400 members of the organisati­on but was delisted on Feb 1 following complaints by the owners that their watches had not been returned.

Tokyo police have obtained an arrest warrant for Toke Match's owner Takazumi Kominato on suspicion of embezzleme­nt of a Rolex watch, Jiji Press reported, citing investigat­ive sources.

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