Money Week

Huge opportunit­ies in Japan

Private equity is eyeing up the country and moving in to break apart giants. That will be great for investors

- Matthew Lynn City columnist

The deal may still fall apart at the last minute. The government may step in to block it. Shareholde­rs may get cold feet. But the takeover of the Japanese conglomera­te Toshiba by the buyout giant Bain Capital looks close to completion. If it happens, it will be among the largest buyouts of a listed company ever staged. It could also pave the way for a series of buyouts of Japan’s ageing, uncompetit­ive conglomera­tes, opening up a huge range of opportunit­ies for their global competitor­s and for investors as well.

Toshiba has a long and distinguis­hed history stretching back to the 1870s, but it has been in trouble for years. It has been beset by a series of accounting scandals, management upheavals and troubled takeovers, while competitio­n in many of its main markets has been getting fiercer, which forced it to slim down and retrench. If you wanted to write a textbook on ineptly managed conglomera­tes, you couldn’t ask for a more perfect case study. Bain’s offer will probably come as a relief to shareholde­rs and indeed to management, even in Japan, where takeovers, and foreign ones especially, have always been disapprove­d of.

The first of a wave of deals

In itself it will be a huge deal. When, and if, a final price is agreed, Toshiba is likely to cost Bain at least $20bn, putting it in the top 20 buy-out deals of all time. So long as it has a free hand, Bain should be able to make plenty of money on that investment. Toshiba, like many Japanese companies, has a sprawling range of units, ranging from air conditione­rs to consumer electronic­s to medical equipment, office systems, and IT management. There are probably dozens of little businesses within it that just need capitalisi­ng, some fresh ideas, a burst of energy, and can suddenly be brought back to health and sold off at a big profit. It will certainly be a lot easier to make money from Toshiba than from a business such as Morrisons, sold to private equity for a fat price last year, which is already very efficientl­y run and operating in a very competitiv­e market.

The deal may well open the door to a wave of private-equity deals in Japan. If so, that will be a unique opportunit­y and one of the most compelling of the 2020s. Japan has lots of great businesses that are ripe for a shake-up. Sony would be a very tempting target for one of the tech giants. Toyota is one of the best carmakers in the world and its two domestic rivals, Mazda and Honda, have fantastic niches and strong reputation­s. Takeda has formidable drugs research, distributi­on, and manufactur­ing in its domestic market, and would surely be a tempting acquisitio­n for Pfizer, GlaxoSmith­Kline and AstraZenec­a, especially if it was broken up into separate units. Japan also has lots of vast, sprawling conglomera­tes of the sort that were all broken up in the US and UK 30 years ago. There are companies we have hardly heard of, such as Itochu, with a value of more than $50bn, which has six divisions from food to textiles, all of which could be knocked briskly into far better shape and then listed as separate companies, or sold off to their global rivals.

Rich pickings for investors

There are three broader opportunit­ies that the Toshiba deal can unlock. For the giant buyout firms, Japan could open up a whole new wave of potential targets, and at precisely the time when traditiona­l hunting grounds such as the UK and

US were starting to look difficult. It will take a lot of capital – not many Japanese conglomera­tes will cost less than the $20bn Toshiba is likely to command – but the returns will be handsome. Second, there will be opportunit­ies for some of the world’s biggest companies to pick up choice businesses in food, consumer goods, engineerin­g and electronic­s as units get spun out of the conglomera­tes that controlled them. This could boost earnings and market share. And finally, there will be plenty for shareholde­rs. If the private-equity firms rip through Japan, the market will finally start to deliver after three decades of dismal returns, and the buyout funds will be a pretty good bet as well.

“Toshiba is a textbook case of an ineptly managed conglomera­te”

 ?? ?? A shake-up is on the cards for corporate Japan
A shake-up is on the cards for corporate Japan
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