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CapitaLand May Tie Up With Wal-Mart, Other Retailer in Japan
Aug. 26 (Bloomberg) -- CapitaLand Ltd., Southeast Asia's largest property developer, may tie up with Wal-Mart Stores Inc. or another retailer in Japan to speed up expansion of its business in the country, said Liew Mun Leong, chief executive of CapitaLand.
It has also started a US$300 million residential fund in Japan with Bahrain's Arcapita Bank BSC that aims to tap a growing overseas market for Islamic banking. - Bloomberg
homesweethome wrote:When I saw this article I thought:
Gosh WallMart, you have been here three years already and you haven't bought the country yet?
Analysts Cool To Talk Of Tommy Hilfiger Bid By Wal-mart Business Online, UK - 27 Sept
LOS ANGELES (Dow Jones) -- Shares of Tommy Hilfiger Corp. got a temporary boost on Monday following a published report that Wal-Mart Stores Inc. ...more...
Taro Toporific wrote:Wal-Mart to buy Tommy Hilfiger ---the street cred of both companies drop 1000% in one day!
homesweethome wrote:Gosh WallMart, you have been here three years already and you haven't bought the country yet?
What is wrong with you?
Taro Toporific wrote:Wal-Mart's Japan unit sees 5th year of loss in '06
TOKYO, Feb 17 (Reuters)- Wal-Mart Stores Inc.'s (WMT.N: Quote, Profile, Research) struggling Japanese subsidiary, Seiyu Ltd. (8268.T: Quote, Profile, Research), said on Friday it expects to be in the red for a fifth straight year in 2006....more...
[SIZE="5"]Wal-Mart leaves S. Korea[/SIZE]
I'm interested in Wal-Mart's failure in S. Korea because it's an interesting case of both a business which did not respect local markets and a market where local competition is very strong.
Carrefour left Japan a few years ago and Nokia has no presence in Japan either. Wal-Mart in Japan is struggling with their Seiyu brand....
Wal-Mart Selling Stores and Leaving South Korea - New York Times....
Japan on Wednesday revised the City Planning Law to ban new large shopping malls and amusement facilities in suburban areas in principle to prevent urban centers from being hollowed out. The revised City Planning Law, which passed the House of Councillors after its earlier approval at the House of Representatives, will be enforced in 18 months to limit locations of new shopping malls to urban centers. If a shopping mall with a total floor space exceeding 10,000 square meters were to be built outside an urban center, the municipal government would have to agree with resident representatives on relevant city plan changes. The revised law will also help prevent hospitals, schools and other public facilities in urban centers from being relocated to suburban areas. Such relocations will be subject to approval by municipal governments...more...
Mulboyne wrote:....Any Wal-Mart country manager can now be in no doubt that the company needs results to justify maintaining an investment.
A little later:Japan's Daiei Inc. said Wednesday it isn't in talks with any third parties about a capital tie-up or possible sale of Daiei shares held by trading company Marubeni Corp. The Japanese retailer, in which Marubeni holds a 44.6% stake, issued the statement after the Nihon Keizai Shimbun reported that Marubeni is seeking to sell part of its stake to Japan's Aeon Co. or Wal-Mart Stores Inc. as part of a strategic alliance to help revive Daiei. Marubeni said Wednesday it is open to strategic partners in operating Daiei and would consider any potential proposals from companies interested in investing in the retailer, but that nothing has been decided. A spokeswoman for Seiyu Ltd., the Japanese subsidiary of Wal-Mart, said she had no comment on the Nikkei report. Aeon issued a statement that it wasn't in talks at this point with Marubeni on purchasing a stake in Daiei.
Japan's Aeon said it will study the possibility of cooperating with Daiei and may enter talks with its main shareholder Marubeni Corp. if a deal looks promising...A spokesman for Aeon, Japan's biggest retailer, said it would study the situation over the next two to three days to decide its position. He characterized Aeon's current stance as a "blank slate" but left open the possibility that Aeon would discuss the matter with Marubeni.
Mulboyne wrote:The Nikkei reported that Marubeni is looking for partners for Daiei after comments from Marubeni President Katsumata. Cue denials all round.
Taro Toporific wrote:The execs at Wal-Mart Japan bemoan the fact they bought Seiyu and universally wish they bought Daiei....
Almost five years since Wal-Mart Stores Inc landed in Japan, the world's largest retailer has yet to find itself on steady ground. Its 53%-owned local unit Seiyu Ltd has posted five straight years of losses, has not paid a dividend for a decade, and has lost three quarters of its stock market value since Wal-Mart first invested in the Japanese supermarket chain. The US retailer quit South Korea and Germany last year to focus on China and other promising areas, prompting speculation it would also desert Japan in the manner of France's Carrefour, which sold its stores to Aeon in 2005. Some analysts say Wal-Mart should either give up on Japan, where it has invested a total of more than US$1 billion (RM3.49 billion), or buy the whole of Seiyu to speed up an overhaul. Others say Japan's US$1.1 trillion retail market -- the world's second largest after the United States -- is too big to pass up for Wal-Mart's international expansion dream. "I believe that Wal-Mart believes they're in Japan for the long haul and right now, that looks like the right bet," said Darrell Rigby, head of the global retail practice at consultants Bain & Co...more...
Mulboyne wrote:The Edge: Wal-Mart's Japan choice - Bulk up or pull out
Almost five years since Wal-Mart Stores Inc landed in Japan, the world's largest retailer has yet to find itself on steady ground....
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