What is the situation?

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Mulboyne wrote:Well, all things in context...is Seagaia a success or failure? If you read the accolades in the foreign press for Ripplewood then Seagaia is a success. By the same criteria, USJ must be blazing a trail of glory although the reality is that both parks have good asset value but volatile cashflow so it depends on what appetite the investors have for risk i.e. it is too early to tell on both.
dimwit wrote:Fair enough. Is the place turning a profit or not?
Mulboyne wrote:Asahi: Universal Studios Japan turns 4, not a profit
Four years after the movie theme park opened in Osaka's Konohana Ward, it is still struggling to post a profit. The year ended March looks like another Fiscal Horror Show-Part IV, with more splatterings of red. Accumulated losses reached about 26.5 billion yen at the end of March 2004. Prospects are they will not be eliminated until fiscal 2012.
AssKissinger wrote:I know one thing about USJ: Their service sucks. Worst in Japan and that's saying a lot.
AssKissinger wrote:Oh Universal Studios, shit I thought you were talking about that new bank. What am I thinking of, help me out.
FG Lurker wrote:AssKissinger wrote:I know one thing about USJ: Their service sucks. Worst in Japan and that's saying a lot.AssKissinger wrote:Oh Universal Studios, shit I thought you were talking about that new bank. What am I thinking of, help me out.
No longer on topic, but for bank service I would have to say that Tokyo-Mitsubishi is amazingly bad.
At least UFJ has bank machine availability 24/7/365. Not only is Tokyo-Mitsubishi's in-bank service absolute CRAP, but they still close all access to their banking network over Golden Week, New Years, and I think Obon too. Bastards.
Why, why oh Lord, would they bother putting in a cash machine, if it's only open when the bank is open? If the fucking bank is open I don't need the fucking cash machine.
For more on Goldman Sachs and leisure in Japan see FG Thread: Just a lot of hot waterGoldman Sachs may become the top shareholder in the Universal Studios Japan movie theme park under a plan by the operator to sell 20 billion yen ($182.1 million) of shares to the U.S. investment bank, the Asahi daily said on Wednesday. USJ Co. Ltd. has been struggling to increase the number of visitors to the park since its opening in March 2001 and would use the proceeds to pay back debt, the newspaper said. Currently, the City of Osaka has a 25 percent stake in USJ. Universal Studios Inc., whose movie franchises include Jurassic Park and Jaws, owns 24 percent. Another 5 billion yen of the preferred shares would be sold to the Development Bank of Japan, the report said. A formal decision is expected to come in July following a shareholders meeting, the report said. USJ officials said they could not comment immediately.
Reuters via Yahoo: Goldman to get stake in Universal Japan park....Currently, the City of Osaka has a 25 percent stake in USJ. Universal Studios Inc., whose movie franchises include Jurassic Park and Jaws, owns 24 percent...
A Japanese real estate investor is looking to build a hotel and entertainment complex in the western city of Osaka with designs and attractions based on Paramount Pictures' films. Sun Capital Management and its investment arm Osaka Investment Management said they were exploring the development of a Paramount-branded complex that would include retail, dining and entertainment facilities and a 5-star hotel. Paramount, a unit of media conglomerate Viacom, said in a statement that it may license intellectual property from its film library and help design the project, but would not be an investor. The resort would be about 20 kilometres (12 miles) away from Universal Studios Japan's struggling theme park, which was sold to a Goldman Sachs-led consortium earlier this year as the number of visitors to its attractions --- based on movies Spiderman and Jurassic Park -- fell. Sun Capital spokesman Yuji Kirishima said they had not yet raised the funds for the project or talked with the Osaka government about potential assistance.
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