Tuesday 13 January 2015

Japanese Company Bankruptcies in 2014 Fewest Since Bubble Era

Japanese corporate bankruptcies fell in 2014 to the lowest level since the final year of Japan’s asset bubble, as a government request for banks to alter loan conditions for smaller firms helped companies stay afloat.
Business failures slid 10.4 percent in 2014 from a year earlier to 9,731 cases, the fewest since 1990, Tokyo Shoko Research Ltd. said in Tokyo today. There were no bankruptcies among listed firms last year for the first time in 24 years.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s reflationary policies have weakened the yen more than 24 percent against the dollar in the past two years, helping the earnings of exporters. At the same time, this has driven up import costs, hurting domestically focused companies and smaller businesses, which employ about 70 percent of the nation’s workforce.
“The benefits of Abenomics haven’t sufficiently spread to smaller firms yet,” Shinya Matsunaga, a senior manager at Tokyo Shoko Research, said before the data was released. “It’s difficult to say that corporate bankruptcies are falling as the economy is improving. Rather, government support for smaller firms and public works spending are having results.”
There were 282 company failures in 2014 in which the weak yen as cited as a contributor, more than double the 139 cases in 2013.
Bankruptcies have kept falling even after the the expiry in 2013 of a moratorium on loan repayments for some smaller firms. The government has called on banks to keep accepting loan rescheduling requests.
About 10 percent of small and medium-sized companies have rescheduled loans, according to Tokyo Shoko’s Matsunaga. “Despite falling corporate bankruptcies, conditions for small to medium-sized companies probably remain severe,” Matsunaga said.

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