Tag: Japan

Japanese Government approves Japan Post's plan to book loss

The Internal Affairs and Communications Ministry on Monday endorsed an April-September business plan by Japan Post anticipating a net loss of 852.7 billion yen for one-time charges to cover future mutual pension payments worth 1.3 trillion yen.

Japan Post mapped out the six-month business plan as its 10-year privatization process is due to begin in October.

The ministry approved Japan Post’s plan to fall into the red for the first time based on a recommendation by an advisory panel to the communications minister.

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Nishikawa to head Japan Post toward privatization

Yoshifumi Nishikawa, president of a firm preparing for October’s privatization of Japan Post, will be named to concurrently head Japan Post from the end of March, informed sources said Wednesday.

The appointment by the government will come as the term for current Japan Post President Masaharu Ikuta expires March 31, they said.

Nishikawa’s firm, Japan Post Corp., is set to become a holding company to own firms emerging on the privatization and breakup of the Japanese postal system.

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Japan Post: Data System can be reprogrammed quickly

Japan Post Corp. said it will be able to reprogram its information system in time for the privatization of postal services, wiping out concerns that the 10-year process may be delayed from its scheduled launch in October, the Kyodo news service reported. The postal privatization law stipulates that the government is allowed to put off the launch of privatization for six months if a substantial delay in the preparation of the information system is considered likely to hinder the process, the report said. Kyodo said the entity in charge of preparations for postal privatization is required to report such a delay, if any, to the government by March 1, 2007.

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Ambassador Pledges Scrutiny of Japan Post Privatization

The United States would file complaints with the World Trade Organization if it determines privatization plans for Japan Post constituted new barriers to trade.

In October 2007, the government-run postal system will be broken into four units, wholly owned by a government holding company, with the Kampo and Yucho segments becoming the world’s largest life insurer and savings bank, respectively. The life insurance unit would operate as an independent company called Kampo Seimei Hoken in Japanese and Postal Insurance Corp. in English. The PIC would debut with assets totaling 114.59 trillion yen (USD953.9 billion) and anticipates first-year earnings of 77 billion yen (USD641 million) in fiscal year 2008.

Under Japan’s 10-year implementation plan for privatization, PIC will see an initial public offering for a limited number of shares on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in late 2011, with the government’s remaining shares to be sold off in subsequent offerings over a five-year period. But it’s the plan’s proposal that the PIC be allowed, as early as this fall, to branch into new product lines, such as accident and medical insurance, and to increase the permitted face values of its life insurance products that is drawing concern from the U.S. life industry.

In its road map, Japan Post Corp. cited the need to branch into new and more profitable areas as a precursor to privatization, arguing such expansion is necessary to draw investors’ interest in the life insurer.

Among concerns raised by private life insurers are Kampo’s current exemptions from taxes and from obligations to contribute to guaranty funds, as well as the fact that regulators historically have allowed Kampo’s contracts to differ sharply from those written in the private sector.

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