In Japan, barbarians are back at the gate

Plus: Financial apps for kids, SPACs get aggressive and more
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The Weekend Pitch
May 2, 2021
Presented by Silicon Valley Bank
Japan has long been a tough nut to crack for US and European private equity firms. Back in 2012, when I began a stint covering Japan's PE market, one of the first deals I reported on was KKR's attempt to buy chipmaker Renesas.

Loathe to see a US buyer take control, an investor group that included the government-backed Innovation Network Corporation of Japan swooped in to buy the loss-making company. At the time, that outcome painted a bleak picture of Japan's buyout market for foreign investors.

Nearly a decade later, deals by KKR and other PE investors represent a sign that recent changes in Japan's corporate landscape are beginning to produce rewards for foreign firms in a market renowned for its limitations.

Welcome to The Weekend Pitch. I'm Andrew Woodman, and you can reach me at andrew.woodman@pitchbook.com. In this edition, we take a look at how PE investors are navigating Japan's buyout landscape and how the country's corporate governance culture is changing.
(Jackyenjoyphotography/Getty Images)
This week, a group led by Bain Capital secured a deal to take control of Japanese industrial conglomerate Hitachi's metals unit for 817 billion yen (around $7.5 billion). Wins like these hint at the potential for more buyout activity.
Bain is now reported to have its eye on yet another Japanese giant: Toshiba. KKR and CVC Capital Partners—the latter of which was recently rebuffed—are also said to be circling the Tokyo-listed asset. If a deal is reached, it could be worth around $20 billion, making it Japan's largest PE-led buyout to date, according to PitchBook data.
It has been a while since Japan has seen PE-backed buyouts on this scale. Such deals peaked in 2017, driven by a combination of shareholder activism and corporate governance reform. In both 2017 and 2018, PE buyouts featuring foreign investors accounted for a large share of deal value, PitchBook data shows. Among the biggest was Bain's $18 billion acquisition of Toshiba's memory business, now rebranded as Kioxia, in 2018.
The deals involving Hitachi Metals and Toshiba are driven by many factors. Hitachi has been restructuring its business for the past decade, pivoting away from electronics hardware toward digital services. Corporate divestitures have long been a prominent feature of Japanese PE buyout activity. But according to The Carlyle Group's Japan head, Kazuhiro Yamada, in a March interview with Reuters, recent deals still represent "the tip of the iceberg."
The Toshiba deal comes as Japan's activist shareholders gain more boardroom power, partly a result of government reforms to improve corporate transparency and protection of minority investors. Toshiba was recently forced to investigate alleged misconduct on shareholder vote tallies amid pressure from activist investors Effissimo and Farallon Capital.
With Japanese opportunities opening up for foreign investors, more PE firms are beefing up their presence on the ground. Among them is Swedish PE giant EQT, which recently opened a Tokyo office as part of its broader efforts to expand in the Asia-Pacific market. Hong Kong-based PAG, meanwhile, recently named two new Japanese co-heads in an effort to further accelerate its investments in the region.
This demonstrates a growing recognition by the industry that those who have found the most success in Japan have already established deep roots there.
Bain, KKR and Carlyle have all built long track records in the market, with local offices, Japanese-speaking country heads and local investment partners.
For all the potential that new conditions are creating in this market, even today Japan still stands apart as a uniquely challenging territory for the PE industry. Many foreign firms are concluding that they'll only make progress by going native and showing patience.
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The innovation economy has emerged stronger than expected from the COVID-19 pandemic. Venture fundraising is on track to have a record year—fueled by large pools of capital looking for a home and an increased appetite for tech. Startups have more cash on hand, longer runways, lower expenses, more efficient operations and unprecedented tailwinds (for some)—creating one of the strongest startup cohorts seen yet. On the exit front, special-purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) are chasing frontier tech companies with their share of total de-SPACs increasing from 4% in 2019 to 30% in 2021.

Read Silicon Valley Bank's Q2 State of the Markets report to learn more about SVB's perspective and outlook.
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Quote/Unquote

"When you look at the [VC] community and the media, they only talk about companies that have raised money, and there's so much pressure as a founder to take funding even if you don't need it. I wanted to send a message that fundraising should not be the definition of a startup's success and that you can succeed on your own terms."

Guillaume Moubeche, co-founder of French email software startup Lemlist

Deal flow

(Philip Steury/Getty Images)
Fintech startups are zeroing in on the next generation of spenders, with apps and cards aimed at Gen Z. This week, three market leaders scored mega-rounds.
  • Andreessen Horowitz led a $260 million round for Greenlight Financial Technology, which bills itself as a tool to help parents raise financially literate kids. The new round nearly doubled Greenlight's valuation to $2.3 billion in just seven months. The Atlanta-based startup's debit card is linked to an app that is heavy on financial education and even offers investing—with parental approval, of course.

  • Meanwhile, Current raised $220 million, with the round also led by a16z. Current's new $2.2 billion valuation is triple what the New York-based company was worth in November, according to PitchBook data. The digital bank isn't exclusively for young people—it focuses more generally on underserved households—but the app does have a suite of parental control features, like automatic allowance and the ability to block specific merchants.

  • Mobile banking startup Step raised $100 million in a General Catalyst-led Series C that drew a syndicate of celebrities, including The Chainsmokers, Will Smith and Jared Leto. The round also attracted TikTok star Charli D'Amelio, one of many partners on the social media app whom California-based Step has enlisted to pitch credit and banking products to teenage users.
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