Japan’s stock market is producing too many ‘punycorns’

  • 📰 FT
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 20 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 11%
  • Publisher: 51%

Sverige Nyheter Nyheter

Sverige Senaste nytt,Sverige Rubriker

The country urgently needs a vibrant business pipeline to replace the unicorn’s unambitious cousin

When EcoNaviSta listed on Tokyo’s all-new Growth Market last year, shares in the artificial intelligence-powered big data sleep analysis healthcare start-up zinged nicely higher. Then it started to wobble. Then it began a slide that would destroy 60 per cent of its market value. Today, the company lolls in a broad pasture inhabited by one of Japan’s most intriguing industrial species: a large, whimpering herd of “punycorns”.

Japanese start-ups are drawn into initial public offerings far earlier than they should be; most are not ready, commercially or psychologically, for that leap, and the public markets cannot realistically force a catch-up. As the head of one Tokyo-based VC fund puts it: a company’s journey should begin in earnest when it does an IPO; too often in Japan, the journey ends with the IPO.

Vi har sammanfattat den här nyheten så att du kan läsa den snabbt. Om du är intresserad av nyheterna kan du läsa hela texten här. Läs mer:

 /  🏆 113. in SE
 

Tack för din kommentar. Din kommentar kommer att publiceras efter att ha granskats.

Sverige Senaste nytt, Sverige Rubriker