logo
Tax-free sales at department stores drop in Japan as foreign tourists curb spending

Tax-free sales at department stores drop in Japan as foreign tourists curb spending

Straits Times2 days ago

In the hopes of drawing back foreign customers, department stores are taking targeted measures. PHOTO: REUTERS
TOKYO - Visitors to Japan have been key customers for department stores, but now they are tightening the purse strings.
Foreign visitors spent about 42.5 billion yen (S$374.4 million) at department stores nationwide in May, down by a massive 40.8 per cent from the same month in 2024, the Japan Department Stores Association announced on June 24.
Department stores will try to adapt, such as by offering an app exclusively for overseas customers, but it remains uncertain whether sales will rebound.
May 2025 was the third straight month for tax-free sales to fall from 2024.
The number of foreign shoppers fell 5.4 per cent year on year, to about 536,000, dropping below the previous year's level for the first time in three years and two months.
With sales for luxury brands and other high-priced items sluggish, average purchases per individual dropped by 37.4 per cent, to about 79,000 yen.
Foreign visitors are believed to have found shopping in Japan less of a bargain after the recent rise in the yen and price hikes by high-end brands, which were prompted by a surge in raw material costs.
Some also argue that Chinese tourists went on fewer shopping sprees due to the slowdown in the Chinese economy.
From January to March, visitors to Japan spent about 222,000 yen on average, up 5.2 per cent from the same period in 2024, according to a survey by the Japan Tourism Agency. That suggests that overall consumption by foreign tourists has not declined.
However, during that quarter, Chinese visitors spent significantly less on total purchases, with the average dropping by 13.7 per cent to 256,000 yen.
'The decline in the average spending per Chinese customer is particularly noticeable. Inbound tourists are diversifying their spending, and they are changing the types of shopping that they value,' said Mr Yoshiharu Nishisaka, managing director of the department stores association.
In the hopes of drawing back foreign customers, department stores are taking targeted measures.
Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings Ltd launched an app for overseas customers in March. At its stores, the company encourages visitors to Japan to sign up for the app, offering discount coupons in return.
Takashimaya Co issues VIP membership cards to its top customers at its Singapore store. The cards grant priority treatment when buying tax-free at branches in Japan, a perk meant to encourage them to visit.
In April, the Daimaru Umeda department store began stocking plastic models and other items related to the Mobile Suit Gundam anime series. 'Japanese content such as anime is enormously popular overseas, and many customers visit us for these sorts of items,' said an employee from parent company J. Front Retailing Co.
'The real question for department stores is how to get foreign customers to stop in,' said senior researcher Naoko Kuga at the NLI Research Institute. 'They need to have a steady outreach to overseas customers.' THE JAPAN NEWS/ASIA NEWS NETWORK
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hong Kong's sixfold jump in share sales drives boom year in Asia
Hong Kong's sixfold jump in share sales drives boom year in Asia

Business Times

time43 minutes ago

  • Business Times

Hong Kong's sixfold jump in share sales drives boom year in Asia

[HONG KONG] Hong Kong's having a banner year as it marches towards becoming the second-largest market globally for share sales for the first time since 2012. Proceeds from listings and additional share sales in the Asian financial hub in the first half have reached about US$33 billion, poised for a sixfold jump from a year ago, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Offerings from electric carmakers BYD and Xiaomi raised the most, followed by Contemporary Amperex Technology Co (CATL), which had the world's biggest new listing this year. Investors have brushed aside tariffs and geopolitical concerns as deals flooded in Hong Kong – including three of the four biggest stock offerings in the world in 2025. Equity strategists remain upbeat about local stocks after the Hang Seng became one of the world's best-performing indexes this year. And with the throng of companies lining up with billion-dollar offerings, it's shaping up to be a good year for investment bankers in the city. 'We're seeing a lot more comfort from global investors around the global and regional macro picture, which is leading them to reassess and increase their exposure to the region including to Hong Kong and mainland China,' said Sunil Dhupelia, co-head of Asia Pacific ECM at JPMorgan Chase. 'Assuming that markets remain stable, it's likely to be very busy in the second half of the year.' Chinese companies that already have shares trading in Shenzhen or Shanghai have been flocking to Hong Kong for additional listings. Those so-called A-H deals accounted for about three-quarters of Hong Kong's total proceeds of US$13.4 billion from first-time share sales in 2025, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up The biggest one was the US$5.2 billion offering by battery-giant CATL, which forged ahead with its Hong Kong listing in May despite being caught up in US-China tensions. The high-profile deal's success shows industry leaders are still able to find global buyers even in an unfavorable environment. Hong Kong listing proceeds are poised to double to a four-year high of more than US$22 billion, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. Big deals to look forward to later this year include those of electric carmaker Seres Group, heavy-machinery maker Sany Heavy Industry and pig breeder Muyuan Foods. Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing, which is celebrating its 25th anniversary, is so fired up about the surge in business that it's parading the iconic gong used to introduce new listings in an unprecedented two-week public tour via a 'gongmobile'. Hong Kong is leading share sales overall in all of Asia-Pacific, where first-half proceeds have climbed almost 30 per cent to about US$100 billion in 2025, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. In India, which led the region in share sales last year, total proceeds stand at about US$20 billion, on track for a drop of more than 20 per cent in the first half, after a stock-market rout led to a slow start. Despite underperforming regional peers, the benchmark Nifty 50 Index has rallied as of late and is on track to post its best quarterly gain in more than a year. That optimism is spilling over to deals, with HDB Financial Services' US$1.5 billion initial public offering (IPO), and Tata Capital's soon-to-come US$2 billion IPO. Elsewhere, the US$4 billion chunk of Japan Post Bank Co sold by its parent and JX Advanced Metals' IPO helped share sale proceeds in Japan rise to US$13.7 billion, on course for a 30 per cent increase, though the pace of deals slowed during the second quarter, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. In South Korea, the recent presidential election ended of months of leadership vacuum, revitalising the Kospi and making it one of the region's best-performing indexes. That's encouraging more companies to pursue listings, such as Baby Shark-creator Pinkfong, the company behind the most watched YouTube video of all time. While geopolitical tensions are bound to continue to complicate decisions for corporate issuers and investors for months to come, Asia is on track to cap a great year of deals. 'We don't expect issuance activity to be slowing,' said Rob Chan, head of Asia ECM syndicate at Citigroup. 'In fact, despite all the uncertainties driven by tariffs and geopolitical tensions in recent months, issuance activity has been very strong.' Going forward, expect to see deals in Hong Kong from companies that mainly rely on Chinese domestic consumption because they are best shielded from tariff effects and geopolitics, according to Christine Xu, the partner in charge of Chinese ECM transactions at the Linklaters law firm. 'Enough water has gone under the bridge around the tariffs, and the market has taken that in its stride,' said JPMorgan's Dhupelia. 'Looking at the rest of the year, the ongoing complex global geopolitical situation is the clear risk that could change the direction of markets.' BLOOMBERG

Berlin to simplify rules in bid to speed up defence surge, draft law says, World News
Berlin to simplify rules in bid to speed up defence surge, draft law says, World News

AsiaOne

timean hour ago

  • AsiaOne

Berlin to simplify rules in bid to speed up defence surge, draft law says, World News

BERLIN - The German government seeks to speed up defence procurement by simplifying legal procedures, fostering European co-operation and facilitating orders to start-ups to make its military combat-ready, according to a draft law seen by Reuters late on Friday (June 27). The speedy surge of the German military's capabilities "must not fail due to overly complex procurement procedures or lengthy authorisation processes", the document said, while warning of signs that Moscow's war objectives reach beyond Ukraine. "The time factor is crucial." At a Nato summit in The Hague, leaders on Wednesday agreed to hike the alliance's defence spending target to 5 per cent of national GDP, with 3.5 per cent dedicated to core defence and 1.5 per cent to related security issues. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz's government on Tuesday approved a budget framework which is expected to see Berlin's total military spending rise from 95 billion euros (S$142 billion) in 2025 to 162 billion euros in 2029, equalling 3.5 per cent of GDP. The new defence procurement law is part of efforts to speed up military purchases that in the past have been plagued by lengthy delays, project failures and cost overshoots. The draft law determines that all procurement that contributes to Europe and Natos military readiness inherently touches upon vital national security, which constitutes a basis to invoke an exemption under European public procurement law. That would amplify a trend that Berlin has been following for some time by more often making use of a national security clause under EU law to prioritize domestic procurement, while also seeking to minimise delays caused by legal challenges. The hurdles for cash-strapped start-ups and innovative companies to join competitions are to be lowered by enabling advance payment to these firms, according to the draft, dated June 25. Fostering joint European procurement The paper also makes provisions for a future simplification of European defence procurement rules, something now under discussion at the EU level, by stating that the German law should not be tougher than European law but facilitate joint European defence procurement across the board. [[nid:719514]] The law will entitle contracting entities to limit tenders to bidders inside the European Union or the European Economic Area, and to determine that a certain share of the contracted goods or services must originate in the EU, according to the document. The draft law does not, however, attempt to change the rule that all defence purchases with a volume of 25 million euros or more must be approved by parliament, a requirement seen by many experts as a major hurdle against speeding up procurement. At the start of June, Defence Minister Boris Pistorius said Germany would need up to 60,000 additional troops under the new Nato targets for weapons and personnel, effectively expanding the military to some 260,000 troops. The Bundeswehr has not yet met a target of 203,000 troops set in 2018, and it is currently short-staffed by some 20,000 regular troops, according to defence ministry data.

Berlin to simplify rules in bid to speed up defence surge, draft law says
Berlin to simplify rules in bid to speed up defence surge, draft law says

Straits Times

time4 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Berlin to simplify rules in bid to speed up defence surge, draft law says

Berlin to simplify rules in bid to speed up defence surge, draft law says BERLIN - The German government seeks to speed up defence procurement by simplifying legal procedures, fostering European cooperation and facilitating orders to start-ups to make its military combat-ready, according to a draft law seen by Reuters late on Friday. The speedy surge of the German military's capabilities "must not fail due to overly complex procurement procedures or lengthy authorisation processes", the document said, while warning of signs that Moscow's war objectives reach beyond Ukraine. "The time factor is crucial." At a NATO summit in The Hague, leaders on Wednesday agreed to hike the alliance's defence spending target to 5% of national GDP, with 3.5% dedicated to core defence and 1.5% to related security issues. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz's government on Tuesday approved a budget framework which is expected to see Berlin's total military spending rise from 95 billion euros in 2025 to 162 billion euros in 2029, equalling 3.5% of GDP. The new defence procurement law is part of efforts to speed up military purchases that in the past have been plagued by lengthy delays, project failures and cost overshoots. The draft law determines that all procurement that contributes to Europe and NATO's military readiness inherently touches upon vital national security, which constitutes a basis to invoke an exemption under European public procurement law. That would amplify a trend that Berlin has been following for some time by more often making use of a national security clause under EU law to prioritize domestic procurement, while also seeking to minimize delays caused by legal challenges. The hurdles for cash-strapped start-ups and innovative companies to join competitions are to be lowered by enabling advance payment to these firms, according to the draft, dated June 25. FOSTERING JOINT EUROPEAN PROCUREMENT The paper also makes provisions for a future simplification of European defence procurement rules, something now under discussion at the EU level, by stating that the German law should not be tougher than European law but facilitate joint European defence procurement across the board. The law will entitle contracting entities to limit tenders to bidders inside the European Union or the European Economic Area, and to determine that a certain share of the contracted goods or services must originate in the EU, according to the document. The draft law does not, however, attempt to change the rule that all defence purchases with a volume of 25 million euros or more must be approved by parliament, a requirement seen by many experts as a major hurdle against speeding up procurement. At the start of June, Defence Minister Boris Pistorius said Germany would need up to 60,000 additional troops under the new NATO targets for weapons and personnel, effectively expanding the military to some 260,000 troops. The Bundeswehr has not yet met a target of 203,000 troops set in 2018, and it is currently short-staffed by some 20,000 regular troops, according to defence ministry data. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store