Posted inBanking & Finance

Hedge funds prowl Japan’s Ashiya City

Why the place is a feeding ground for hedge funds tapping the wealth of people like Kunihisa Sagami.

Japan’s Ashiya City has been home to the nation’s industrial titans since samurai ruled the land more than a century ago. Now it’s a feeding ground for hedge funds tapping the wealth of new multi-millionaires like Kunihisa Sagami.

Sagami, founder of mail-order cosmetics and jewellery supplier Epix, is one of the residents of the gated enclave overlooking the port city of Kobe who are among the highest taxpayers in Japan.

They’re the elite in a nation where households hold a combined $15 trillion in financial assets – more than the annual gross domestic product of the US.

Overseas hedge funds including Winton Capital Management Ltd and MKP Capital Management LLC are angling for that wealth to replenish capital after the credit crisis triggered the worst losses on record in their $1.6 trillion industry. And investors like Sagami are biting.

“I’m in the middle of shifting my cash holdings to hedge funds,” Sagami, 48, said in an Oct 14 interview at his Hisashi Kobayashi-designed house on a 3300 sq m lot. “This is the beginning of the biggest bargain sale.”

He confirmed last week he is still investing in the funds.

This year has been the worst on record for hedge funds, with average losses of 16 percent through October, according to data compiled by Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc.

Investors pulled $40bn from the funds in October, while market losses cut industry values by $115bn, the firm said.

It isn’t just hedge funds circling the wealthy of communities like Ashiya. London-based HSBC Holdings Plc opened its first HSBC Premier Centre in the Kansai region in Kobe on Oct 24 to provide wealth management for individuals.

A 40-minute drive from Ashiya, the private-banking team at the Osaka-based Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co, Japan’s fifth- largest bank, also has the community in its sights.

Department chief Hiromitsu Nakagawa said he offers mutual funds that include hedge funds to individuals with more than $5.16m in financial assets.

He said many clients want to diversify portfolios that are mostly made up of inherited properties and securities.

Former residents of Ashiya include Chubei Itoh, who in 1858 founded Marubeni Corp, a linen trading business that has become the nation’s fifth-largest trading company.

His descendents still live nearby, the Tokyo-based company said. Shunya Toji, former president of the company now known as Sumitomo Corp, Japan’s third-biggest trading house, died in his Ashiya residence in 1961.

The global equities slump hasn’t deterred Sagami, who said he was Ashiya’s highest taxpayer in 2003 after annual sales from his business peaked at about $39.2m.Seated by a Le Corbusier table in front of floor-to-ceiling windows with views of Osaka bay, the hang-gliding enthusiast said he invests a pool of “several billions of yen,” mainly in emerging markets including China, Vietnam and India.

His holdings include Tsingtao Brewery Co, China’s biggest beer company, and PetroChina Co, China’s biggest oil producer.

Tsingtao’s Hong Kong-listed shares, which have fallen 36 percent this year, more than doubled in the five years Sagami has held the stock. PetroChina has almost doubled during the period.

Sagami declined to give his net worth.

“It’s a complete myth that high-net-worth individuals are starting to become conservative with their investments,” said Soichiro Takaoka, president of Tokyo-based Abraham Group Holdings Co, which provides concierge services to clients with combined assets of more than $5.16bn.

“The $1m luxury apartments may not be selling, but the fact is $5.16m condominiums are,” he said. “One way or another, the rich tend to become richer.”

Takaoka’s Yucasee club, open to people with financial assets of more than $1m, offers services ranging from purchasing luxury villas in Bali to arranging VIP seats at major league baseball games featuring Daisuke Matsuzaka of the Boston Red Sox and Ichiro Suzuki of the Seattle Mariners.

Takaoka said about 70 percent of Yucasee’s members – mainly entrepreneurs, doctors and lawyers in their 30s and 40s – have invested, or are interested in investing in hedge funds. Abraham Private Bank offers members access to about 20 of the world’s top hedge funds.

The number of high net worth individuals in Japan – people with at least $1m in financial assets excluding consumer goods and primary residences – rose 2.2 percent in 2007, Capgemini SA and Merrill Lynch & Co said in a September report.

Japan accounted for 40 percent of the wealth in the Asia-Pacific region.

New York-based MKP Capital, with more than $4bn in assets, wants Asia to account for as much as 30 percent of its hedge-fund business, vice president Timothy R Lynch said in September.

London-based Winton, with about $15bn in assets, increased the size of its Japanese marketing team in the past three months, said spokesman Robin Eggar.

“We have become increasingly aware of how important all Japanese investors, both institutional and individual, have become to the company’s development as a global fund manager,” Eggar said in an e-mail.

Sagami likened the risks of investing to his hobby.

“From the ground, hang-gliding looks like a very smooth and elegant sport,” he said. “But in reality, as a pilot you are always looking out for dangers and scoping emergency landing sites.”

This article is courtesy of Bloomberg.

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