Market
Review - Japan
by Fabian Panthaki, Assistant Editor
- Namnews
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Japan's retail market is the second largest in the world with per capita
retail sales closely trailing those of the US. The country also has the second
highest GDP in the world, but a sluggish economy is causing the market
considerable difficulties.
Numbers and Trends:
Japan’s retail scene is one of
the most highly developed markets in the world – and is also extremely
competitive and highly saturated. Major conglomerates dominate the field,
operating multiple chains in separate, and often in the same, formats. However,
the country’s overall retail sales market has seen limited growth in recent
years – a 0.3% rise in 2004, a 1.2% rise in 2005, and a 0.2% fall in 2006.
This has been partly due to a weakened economy as a
result of declining exports to the US, and has led in the astonishing statistic
of supermarket sales declining on a year-on-year basis in 43 of the last 44
months (till October 2007). Grocery retailers constituted 32% of total
Japanese retailing current value sales in 2005, and food sales account for 63%
of the total sales at all supermarkets.
There are an estimated 5,000
supermarket chains in the country, many of which operate only a handful of
stores in a narrow geographical area. The food retail market is highly advanced,
reaching the fourth-generation of private label brands and being at the
forefront of innovation in terms of marketing strategies, tie-ups with other
formats, and customer service enhancement. However, the density of local
retailers has made it difficult for international retailers to make a mark, as
evidenced by Carrefour, which had to exit the market after racking up losses of
US$264m in four years of operations.
These factors have resulted in a
series of mergers and acquisitions in recent times. This activity is two-fold in
nature - smaller chains joining up to survive against bigger retailers; and the
bigger chains diversifying into newer sectors to protect against saturation. The
market is also seeing the creation of newer niche segments, as the retailers
fight to extract every yen possible.
Retailers are also becoming
increasingly inventive, constantly searching for new ideas and practices in
order to attract customers back into their stores. Several of the chains
recently introduced electronic money, using cards that are accepted at their own
stores. The major department stores are focusing on personal shopping services
for wealthy individuals, to compensate for declining overall customer traffic.
They have also initiated other efforts to target niche consumer groups, such as
elderly shoppers or housewives. Meanwhile, internet retailing, convenience
stores and pharmacy chains are expected to continue to be the key drivers of
constant value growth.
Who’s Who:
Japan’s retail market is
dominated by two diversified retailing groups, and littered with numerous
middle-level players and regional chains.
Seven & I Holdings is the
biggest retail conglomerate in the country, and the holding company was formed
by the merger of the Ito-Yokado supermarket chain, Seven-Eleven convenience
chain, and Denny’s department store chain. It now controls 81 subsidiaries and
12 associated companies. It is followed by Aeon Co, the holding company for Aeon
Group, which operates the Jusco, Wellmart and Maxvalu supermarkets, the Ministop
c-store chain, and other speciality outlets. It has also acquired control of
Maruetsu, Tokyo’s largest supermarket chain.
The other major supermarket
chains in the country are Daiei, Seiyu (owned by Wal-Mart), and Tsurukame
(Tesco). Regional supermarket chains include Nagasakiya and U-Store.
The major convenience store
chains are 7-11, Lawson, FamilyMart, MiniStop, Cocostore, Circle K Sunkus, and
Metro Cash & Carry. The department store sector is ruled by chains such as
Isetan, Mitsukoshi, Daimaru, Takashimaya and Matsuzakaya.
Recent movements:
Supermarkets -
One of the biggest moves in
recent times has been the growing expansion and consolidation of Aeon’s
operations. The group acquired a 20% stake in Maruetsu from Daiei in March, and
simultaneously took a stake of 15% in terms of voting rights in Daiei from
trading house Marubeni Crop, after Daiei spent three years being rehabilitated
with help from the state-backed Industrial Revitalization Corp of
Japan.
After these moves, Aeon,
Maruetsu and Marubeni teamed up for a business tie-up regarding joint purchasing
and product distribution. Under the deal, the three groups will jointly develop
private label brands, share information on operational systems and tenant
information, and cut costs by cooperating on merchandise procurement and product
development.
Meanwhile, Aeon is set to bring
its 150 group firms under the umbrella of a holding company, to be established
in 2008. It will also spin off its supermarket business into a separate entity,
and will divide the firms into nine business areas. The holding company will
oversee all group personnel, accounting and financial matters. The move is
expected to help its units to boost operating efficiency, and enable them to
cooperate more effectively.
Wal-Mart has recently taken
control of its subsidiary Seiyu Ltd, through a tender offer which raised its
existing 50.9% stake to over 95%. Frustrated with six consecutive years of
annual losses at the chain, the US giant is looking to speed up the revival of
the chain.
Meanwhile, Tesco took the gamble of opening its first Tesco Express earlier this
year, and by next summer plans to open a total of 23 Express stores. Tesco has
had a presence in the Japanese market since its acquisition of the C Two-Network
in 2003, which operates over 100 small supermarkets in and around Tokyo under
the Tsurukame banner.
Convenience Stores –
This sector is witnessing some
of the most intense competition, as the smaller companies try to fight off
competition from the chains operated by Aeon and Seven & I. FamilyMart and
Circle K Sunkus have joined forces to jointly develop private label products,
and are expected to be joined by Itochu and U-Store. The joint move is an
unusual one for Japanese convenience store chains, as they belong to different
corporate groups.
C-store chains are also moving
into other ventures to generate revenue, such as FamilyMart’s tie up with video
store chain Tsutaya to open combined outlets including at train stations. Some
of the chains are also reportedly ready to introduce a regional pricing scheme,
charging higher in urban areas.
Department Stores –
This sector has also seen two
major deals this year, upsetting the existing status quo. First, market leader
Takashimaya was dethroned by the merger of the Daimaru and Matsuzakaya. The two
chains formed J Front Retailing, an entity having combined sales of ¥1.17trn.
This group in turn was replaced by a merger of Isetan and Mitsukoshi, the No.4
and No.5 store chains. The new company will have sales of ¥1.60trn. Isetan and
Mitsukoshi have very little geographical overlap and have a different clientele
- upscale Mitsukoshi targets wealthy customers, while fashionable Isetan
attracts relatively young shoppers.
Results:
For the 2006/07 fiscal year,
Seven & I reported operating profit of ¥287bn, as sales grew 37% to ¥5.33trn.
For the first half of the
current year, operating profit rose 1.3% to ¥144bn, with supermarket profits up
70% and c-store profits down 2.6%. For the full year, it expects operating
profit of ¥300bn, and net profit of ¥145bn.
For the 2007 fiscal year, Aeon’s
operating profit rose 14% to ¥189.73bn, while sales rose 8.9% to ¥4.83trn. For
the first half of his year, operating profit fell 18% to ¥67.8bn, despite a 7.7%
rise in sales to ¥2.53trn. For the year to February 2008, Aeon projects
consolidated sales of over ¥5.25trn and operating profit of ¥200bn-210bn.
In 2007, Daiei’s net profit fell
by 90% to ¥41.3bn, while revenue fell 23% year-on-year to ¥1.28trn. For the
first-half to August 2007, operating profit slumped 79.7% to ¥5.15bn, while
sales dropped 10.7% to ¥600.38bn. It has forecast a 68.5% fall in net profit to
¥13bn for the full year.
Seiyu generated a consolidated
net loss of ¥11.4bn for the January-September period, compared with a loss of
¥59.5bn yen last year. It said food sales were strong, but apparel sales were
sluggish. Overall sales, excluding operating revenue, dropped 1% to ¥700.9bn,
while same-store sales were down 1%.
Store Numbers of Key
Retailers:
|
Company |
Outlets |
|
Seven & I |
32,450+ |
|
Aeon |
9,400+ |
|
Daiei |
250 |
|
Seiyu |
390+ |
|
Tesco |
120+ |
|
FamilyMart |
13,000+ |
|
Lawson |
8,500+ |
|
Circle K |
5,360+ |
|
J Front |
112 |
|
Isetan/Mitsukoshi |
33 |
Date
article published: 01/12/2007
