
Activist investor Oasis owns 5% stake in Japan electronics maker Casio
HIDEAKI HIGASHIURA
TOKYO -- Hong Kong-based activist investor Oasis Management now owns roughly 5% of Japan's Casio Electronics, according to a shareholding report.
As of July 2, Oasis had acquired 12.33 million shares, equivalent to 5.19% of Casio's outstanding stock, according to a large shareholding report filed with the Kanto Local Finance Bureau, a regulator whose jurisdiction includes Tokyo. The acquisition cost about 14.6 billion yen ($100 million).

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Of the 10,564 people who received the subsidies in fiscal 2024, 39 percent were foreigners, with Chinese nationals accounting for 76 percent of the non-Japanese cohort at 3,151, according to the ministry. The number of foreign students at high-level institutions such as universities and vocational colleges as of May 2024 surged 21.7 percent from the previous year to 229,467, including 20,015 enrolled in PhD programs. The decision to withdraw support for foreign students comes in stark contrast to the government's stated goal of increasing the number of PhD candidates from overseas. It set a target to raise the ratio of international students in doctoral programs to 33 percent by 2033 over 10 years, up from 21 percent in 2023. 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Foreign students will remain eligible for research expenses. Yusuke Kazama, lecturer at Nara Prefectural University, said the policy is a reflection of the recent increase in xenophobia in Japan, characterized by the "Japanese First" platform promoted by Sanseito, a new populist right-wing party that campaigns on anti-immigrant policies. "I fear that foreigners, who are in the minority, are being scapegoated" in this social phenomenon, Kazama said, stressing, "International students who have come to Japan with a desire to learn and who have chosen to study here should never be excluded."