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Japan Internet Report No. 66 Fall 2002

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In this issue:

- Japan's most profitable Internet business
- Tokyo Mystery Men reveal auction secrets
- Real estate data moving to the Internet
- New book and newsletter are about you



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Japan's most profitable Internet business

What's the most profitable Internet business in Japan today? An educated guess is Yahoo! Japan Auctions. Industry insiders say the unit generates a billion yen monthly in revenue (about U.S. $8.2 million), all from pure, largely self-service online offerings that require a minimum of human intervention. That's not chump change!

Why has Yahoo! Japan scored such amazing success with its auction services? One clear reason would seem to be that it meets the vast, pent-up demand in Japan for a forum through which people can efficiently sell secondhand items. Traditionally there have not been markets for secondhand durables in Japan. Purchases of secondhand furniture and non-fashion clothing are still largely stigmatized, and these items are sold primarily through "recycle shops" run by community centers. Consumers actually pay service providers to haul away perfectly usable "oversized disposables" that would fetch real money in secondhand markets overseas. And newly-constructed homes comprise a whopping 89% of the retail housing market, while pre-owned dwellings account for only 11% percent of sales each year (contrast this with the U.S., where sales of pre-owned homes comprise 76% of the market each year).

Yes, Japan is clearly a nation where the "new" or "unused" is highly valued and the "old" or "secondhand" is by and large disdained.

But economic reality has a way of reshaping values, and attitudes toward secondhand goods are changing.

A key challenge has been the lack of economically efficient forums for displaying used merchandise and transacting with buyers. Physical space in Japan, whether leased or purchased, is so expensive that it is generally not feasible to sell secondhand merchandise through conventional retail channels. One happy exception to this is BookOff, the used bookstore chain that has grown to nearly 700 outlets in recent years, thanks in large part to government rules authorizing price maintenance contracts in the publishing industry (i.e. bookstores do not sell new books at a discount).

Enter Yahoo! Japan and its online auction services. Voila! A mechanism for selling used merchandise that 1) doesn't require physical space, 2) can easily be viewed/used from anywhere in the nation at low cost by anyone with Internet access, and 3) leverages Japan's highly efficient and cost-effective personal parcel delivery and fund transfer infrastructure.

No wonder Yahoo! Japan Auctions has been such a hit. See our Mystery Man analysis of auction revenues below, then read on to learn about a real estate related Internet development whose financial impact could dwarf anything we've seen before in the Internet space.

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" ... Tell me the company you keep, and I'll tell you who you are ..."
- Proverb

http://www.ion-global.com/clients/index.htm

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Tokyo Mystery Men reveal action secrets

Tokyo Mystery Men reveal auction secrets

In our quest to divine the secrets of Yahoo! Japan's online auction success we sought the experience of several Tokyo Mystery Men. Following are their comments:

- How did you come up with the billion yen monthly revenue estimate for Yahoo! Japan Auctions?

Mystery Man One: The company claims two million registered users and approximately 2.6 million current "for sale" listings. Based on this, membership fee revenues alone are 560 million yen per month (280 yen x 2 million members), before any items are even displayed, let alone sold.

Next are the Insertion Fees. It costs a minimum of ten yen to submit for display and sale ("insert") any item. With approximately one million items submitted daily, this comes out to 300 million yen in monthly revenue (10 x 1 million x 30). Of course the sensitivity in this estimate lies in the one million insertions per day figure, which I overheard as a "fly on the wall." At the same time, insertion fees for some items are substantially higher and therefore generate significantly more revenue. For example, it costs 500 yen to list an automobile or motorcycle. Moreover, there are "Additional Option" fees to help you promote your listing - things like bold text, different backgrounds and so forth. Disregarding this up-sell revenue, they're up to 860 million yen per month before a single item has actually been sold.

Finally, there are the Final Value Fees. This is where Yahoo! Japan Auctions takes a minimum three percent cut of the winning bid. Again, the fee is higher (3,000 yen) for automobiles or motorcycles. What I overheard was that they are generating 30 million yen per day in such fees. That strikes me as puffery. But if their claim of a 40-50% sales-to-insertion success rate is true and the daily insertion rate is accurate, they are generating a of 360 million yen per month from Final Value Fees. In any case, I reckon that the total revenue figure of one billion yen per month is quite plausible.

- What have you actually sold through Yahoo! Japan Auctions?

Mystery Man One: I sold some office furniture. I also sold for 4,500 yen a home-use telephone that I bought just over a year earlier for nearly 10,000 yen.

Mystery Man Four: A buddy of mine has been successfully selling old shoes, among other things, if you can believe that.

- How does the company keep unscrupulous sellers from cheating naEe and first-time bidders?

Mystery Man One: Successful bidders subsequently rate their transactions, naming the sellers, in a forum that is viewable by any auction user. This encourages sellers to deal fairly and expeditiously with bidders Eit's a clever "honor" mechanism that is quite effective in keeping unscrupulous sellers out of the market.

- Why didn't eBay Japan clean up in this market? After all, they were dedicated to auctions from the very beginning.

Mystery Man Two: When Yahoo U.S. caught wind that eBay was planning to go into Japan, the order came down to stop all development on new projects and roll out auctions as soon as possible. They did that, got it up before eBay Japan, and the rest is history.

Mystery Man Three: I think a key factor is simply brand awareness. Yahoo! Japan has by far the most powerful online brand in Japan, while eBay was not well-known to those outside the small auction enthusiast community. People in Japan trust and rely on brands more than any other consumer group in the world, so a brand awareness/recognition advantage here can be overwhelming.

Mystery Man One: Ken Belson covered this in detail more than a year ago. See http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/01_23/b3735139.htm.
The key point is that Yahoo! Japan had an overwhelmingly larger number of both sellers and bidders. From the standpoint of either party, the advantage of selling through Yahoo! Japan Auctions was, as they say in Japanese, "as clear as seeing fire," since they were far more likely to conclude a successful transaction via Yahoo! Japan than over eBay, even if they had to pay a small fee to do so.

Mystery Man Four: In any case, why the hell are we debating this? eBay Japan is out of the market.

JIR: Indeed. 'Nuff said about auctions.

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Can we let you in on a little secret?

How about a number of secrets?

http://www.ion-global.com/case/index.htm

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Real estate data moving to the Internet

As an amateur investor in U.S. real estate and someone who still aspires to secure a permanent dwelling here in Japan, I've been monitoring residential housing prices in Tokyo for years. But I've been frustrated by the almost complete lack of transparency in the retail housing market.

In the U.S., any consumer who has Internet access can go to a site such as http://www.portlandmaps.com, enter a residential address, and find out 1) how much a particular house sold for, 2) tax bills for prior years, and 3) official plat or Tax Map Key information such as lot size, zoning, and so forth. It is therefore easy to investigate the actual sales prices and other critical information about properties comparable to ones under consideration for purchase or lease.

The Japanese counterpart to this system for consumers is paper-based, contains no transaction value or tax information, requires the inquirer to pay fees (not cheap - I've done it), and can only be accomplished through in-person visits to government offices. This means consumers are at a severe disadvantage when buying real estate; they have no way of investigating sales prices themselves, and must rely on advertisements or statements by real estate salespeople, who do have access to Multiple Listing Services (which are far less comprehensive than those available in the U.S.).

Now comes what in my view could be one of the most significant developments ever in the Japanese Internet space - something that if fully implemented could have stunning impact on the nation over time. The system described below would provide incredible benefits to both buyers and sellers of real estate. On the other hand, some observers say that if the transparency promised by this system were to be quickly and thoroughly achieved, the market would immediately discover that "the emperor truly has no clothes," and we would see a crash in real estate prices that could destabilize the entire economy.

JIR correspondent Jay Johannesen (jay@jayjohannesen.net) is well qualified to comment. He co-founded a real estate technology company in the U.S., and has acquired and developed residential, mixed-use, and commercial real estate on behalf of Japanese clients. Here is Jay's report:

Start looking for increased transparency in real estate information, arguably the darkest of black holes in Japan's information-hoarding society. Over the past few months, the companies that compile information for residential and commercial real estate brokers have begun to team up with technology providers to digitize sales transaction history, rental data, and related information, and transfer this information to the Internet. Initially this will allow brokers and lenders to better access and analyze data, lowering the cost and amount of time it takes to finance, or buy and sell a property.

This initiative comes on top of the announcement this past May 8 that the National Land and Transport Ministry (Kokudo Kotsu-sho) was teaming up with industry groups to create a nationwide Web site to publish the real estate listing data (both rental and sales) of the 130,000 real estate brokers in Japan, and make available the majority of the real estate listings to the public by January next year. These projects put Japan in a position to ultimately leapfrog the U.S. in providing comprehensive real estate information directly to the public over the Internet. In the U.S., real estate agents have succeeded in keeping home listings data off the Internet, fearing that access to the data would somehow lead to the public bypassing brokers altogether.

According to Michael Korver (Michael@aruke.com), co-founder of Alchemedia Inc., a Tokyo-based real estate technology provider, the impetus for the disclosure of more sophisticated information has come from foreign financial institutions seeking information for real estate acquisitions and for the financing of commercial properties. These foreign investors have come to expect comprehensive cash flow history, vacancy rates, tenant information, and relevant sales comparables, and they want this information delivered over the Internet in a form they can analyze. Traditionally in Japan, real estate information has been limited to proprietary paper based data with properties valued based on artificial government-mandated values.

Aggregating and digitizing real estate information is the first and most difficult step in enabling an important array of technologies. These technologies will allow faster and cheaper mortgage loan origination, securitization, and the ability to research vast amounts of real estate information on the Internet rather than having to depend entirely on a broker. Real estate agents who are providing value to their clients have nothing to fear from the distribution of information over the Internet. When individuals or institutions are buying and selling real estate, be it a family home or an office building, they will still seek the assistance of an expert.

When real estate information is accessible to all, and not dependent on a network of school connections, or nights of cultivating relationships singing karaoke, property prices will move to levels that truly reflect supply and demand. In the case of Japan, that almost certainly means a further downward trend in pricing, exacerbating the challenges of deflation and financial institutions' troubled loan portfolios. Nevertheless, even if "the emperor has no clothes," and supply far exceeds demand, it is unlikely that prices will plummet. Real estate prices tend to be "sticky," meaning they adjust to market equilibrium much more slowly than other investment vehicles such as stocks, and home sellers are particularly reluctant to take losses. Moreover, most people would agree that more affordable property prices in Japan are a desirable long-term goal.

Jay Johannesen
Voice: 090-9156-4963

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New book and newsletter are about you

Together with buddy Carl Kay, I am writing a book inspired by a subset of the Japan Internet Report readership. Stay tuned for details... Also, be prepared to review your first issue of the Japan Entrepreneur Report, my new newsletter debuting next month. If it doesn't turn your crank, simply hit the single-click unsubscribe URL prominently featured in the first (and every subsequent) issue.

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Tim Clark
Editor
Japan Internet Report
tim@jir.net

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