Depending on the metrics, Japan is the world’s third- or fourth-largest economy by GDP, has sophisticated and well-developed debt and equity capital markets, and is home to many of the world-leading corporations. Until recently, however, the development of the Japanese alternatives industry has lagged that of other developed countries, from both a transactional and fundraising perspective. That said, Japanese M&A activity and fundraising have increased meaningfully by most metrics over the past five to seven years, and with Chinese M&A activity and fundraising falling over the past several years, Japan’s position in the overall Asia alternatives landscape is becoming increasingly prominent. Japan’s alternative investments industry has also shown signs of maturity, with a growing diversity of investment strategies, sectors and fund sizes. New policy initiatives and market developments have also led to the development of new distribution channels for alternative investment products, with non-Japanese sponsors of alternative asset products increasingly tapping capital from Japanese HNWIs, and, more recently, from Japanese retail investors. And Japan’s first democratisation portal, formally launched in 2024, is poised to further disrupt existing distribution channels by making both foreign and domestic alternative investment products accessible to individual investors over the Internet. Ultimately, only time will tell, but there are strong signs that the Japanese alternative investments industry is growing in significance and appears to increasingly have the characteristics of its counterparts in North American and Europe.
Please refer to the Japan Trends and Developments chapter in this guide for information on key trends.
A wide range of alternative funds are established in Japan. The main fund structures are summarised in 2.2 Regulatory Regime for Funds (note that retail funds and investment trusts are not discussed, as they are beyond the scope of this chapter). By class, real estate and private equity are most common, with an increasing number of infrastructure funds and increasing amounts of capital raised by them.
For legal, regulatory and tax reasons, different fund structures are used for different types of alternative funds. This section outlines six of the most common domestic structures and discusses their applicability with respect to different strategies.
Investment Business Limited Partnerships (Toshi Jigyo Yugen Sekinin Kumiai)
Under Japanese law, limited partnerships are formed under the Investment Business Limited Partnership Act and formed as investment business limited partnerships (IBLPs), with a general partner that manages the fund and limited partners having limited liability. The IBLP has become a common domestic entity used by alternative funds, particularly in the private equity, venture capital and infrastructure spaces, and in some cases for real estate funds.
The use of the IBLP structure requires additional considerations depending on the investment target, as an IBLP may not invest 50% or more of its assets in non-Japanese securities (other than foreign partnership interests). IBLPs may present potential Japanese tax issues for non-Japanese investors, as will be discussed below.
As offshore fund structures can generally be used for investments in Japanese assets, it is not uncommon for Cayman Islands exempted limited partnerships (ELPs) and similar offshore vehicles to be used for alternative funds that invest in Japan.
General Partnerships (Nin’i Kumiai)
A general partnership (nin’ikumiai,or NK) may be used when an IBLP is unsuitable – eg, due to the asset class restrictions mentioned above. An NK can be managed by appointing an executive partner who will manage the NK, but all the partners (including those that may have only passive roles), will have unlimited liability.
GK-TK Structures
A GK-TK is a structure unique to Japan that is often used for making domestic real estate and infrastructure investments. In essence, a godo kaisha (GK), which is a form of limited liability company that acts as a property-holding company, enters into a bilateral contract, called a tokumei kumiai agreement (TK agreement), with the investor (TK investor). Pursuant to the TK agreement, the TK investor makes a commitment to contribute capital to the GK to be used for the GK’s investment activities (as set forth in the TK agreement) in exchange for profit rights relating to such activities. In a GK-TK structure, the TK investor is not permitted to take an active role in the management of the GK.
The GK-TK structure may also be used as an aggregating arrangement for multiple TK investors, effectively creating a fund-like collective investment scheme. In such a case, while the TK agreements remain bilateral contracts between the TK investor and the GK acting as a TK operator, certain rights may be conditioned upon the collective actions of other TK investors. This provides for governance and co-ordination among the TK investors in a manner somewhat similar to more common alternative fund arrangements. Despite the creation of a partnership-like relationship for the TK investors with respect to the GK, the GK-TK itself is a contractual arrangement and there is no actual legal GK-TK entity.
Tokutei Mokuteki Kaisha (TMK)
A TMK is literally a special-purpose company that takes the form of a limited liability company established under the Act on the Securitisation of Assets. It is used exclusively for the securitisation of assets and is often used as a vehicle for investment in real estate. Property rights can be securitised via a TMK through the issuance of asset-backed securities to investors, usually in the form of equities or bonds.
J-REITs
Japanese REITs (J-REITs) are established as investment corporations under the Act on Investment Trusts and Investment Corporations. Many J-REITs are listed and publicly traded in Japan, although an increasing number of J-REITs are private. The rules and regulations applicable to the formation and management of J-REITs are significantly more complex and onerous than those applicable to the other fund structures discussed above.
Investment Trusts (ToshiShintaku)
Investment trusts are established under the Act on Investment Trusts and Investment Corporations. They are a popular form of investment fund for both retail and institutional investors. Please see 2.2 Regulatory Regime for Funds for further information regarding investment trusts.
In Japan, the regulatory regime applicable to an alternative fund depends, in the first instance, on the organisational structure of the fund – primarily, whether the fund is organised as a partnership, corporate or other entity form.
Partnership-Type Alternative Funds
For partnership-like vehicles, including IBLPs, foreign partnerships, NKs and GK-TKs (referred to collectively here as “funds”), the relevant regulatory regime will generally be the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act of Japan (FIEA), which sets forth the rules applicable to both the offering of securities and regulation of the managers for managing the assets of the relevant fund. The FIEA is generally applicable where an investor in a fund or the fund’s manager is located in Japan. This section considers the FIEA regulations applicable to marketing and investment management separately.
Marketing Regulations for Partnerships
As a general rule, if a general partner of a partnership, including an IBLP or a foreign partnership (or a person acting in a similar capacity in a partnership-type fund which is referred to collectively here as a “general partner”), solicits investors in Japan, the general partner must generally either be registered as a financial instruments business operator engaged in Type II financial instruments business under the FIEA (ie, hold a Type II licence) or satisfy the requirements for one of the exemptions from holding a Type II licence.
Alternatively, the interests in the fund may be marketed to investors in Japan by a placement agent holding a Type II licence.
QII Exemption (for marketing)
One of the most common exemptions from holding a Type II licence in connection with marketing interests in a partnership-like fund under the FIEA available to a general partner of the fund is the special business exemption for qualified institutional investors (QII Exemption). The QII Exemption is available to qualified general partners where the fund’s partners include at least one qualified institutional investor (QII) solicited in Japan and 49 or fewer non-QIIs that meet certain statutory qualifications (ie, non-QII qualified purchasers). If a general partner qualifies for the QII Exemption, it must make a notice filing pursuant to Article 63 of the FIEA on Form 20 (Article 63 Notice) with the applicable local finance bureau prior to having a closing with the investors who are solicited in Japan. Certain transfer restrictions and asset segregation requirements will apply. The general partner will be subject to certain other ongoing compliance requirements, including compliance with certain code of conduct rules and disclosure requirements, certain record-keeping obligations, and the requirement for a non-Japanese general partner to appoint a local representative in Japan.
Two additional exemptions were introduced in 2021:
Each of these exemptions has additional requirements, including the requirement for the general partner to have an office in Japan and additional compliance requirements. The QII Exemption continues to be the most popular exemption used in the market.
Investment Management Regulations
In addition to marketing regulations, a partnership-type fund will also need to comply with certain investment management regulations under the FIEA if it will invest mainly in securities and/or derivatives. In this case, the general partner will need to register as a financial instruments business operator engaged in investment management business under the FIEA (ie, an “investment manager” registration) unless the general partner satisfies the requirements of one of the available exemptions.
QII Exemption (for investment management)
The QII Exemption discussed above with respect to marketing is also generally available with respect to investment management regulation requirements. There are some slight differences in the requirements for the QII Exemption for the purposes of investment management regulations compared to the exemption for marketing, such as the additional ongoing compliance obligations (including additional asset segregation requirements), but otherwise the exemptions are fairly similar. By filing an Article 63 Notice, the general partner will be exempt from registration as an investment manager under the FIEA.
De minimis exemption
An alternative exemption from the investment manager registration requirement under the FIEA, which is available solely for funds established outside Japan, is the so-called “de minimis exemption” (also sometimes referred to as the “foreign funds exemption”). This exemption is available when:
Additional regulations may also apply depending on the type of investments made by the fund, including regulations under the Act on Specified Joint Real Estate Ventures and/or the Act on Regulation of Commodity Investment.
Regulations Applicable to TMKs, J-REITs and Investment Trusts
Marketing regulations
Marketing of interests in a TMK, a J-REIT or an investment trust may only be made by persons who either hold a Type I financial instruments business operator licence or satisfy an available exemption.
Separate and apart from the registration requirements for a person who engages in the marketing of the relevant interests, the offering will be considered a public offering unless it qualifies under an applicable private placement exemption, and will therefore require the filing of a securities registration statement and the meeting of additional requirements under the FIEA. Two private placement exemptions are available, as follows:
The requirements for such exemptions differ depending on the type of interest.
Investment management regulations
Under the applicable law, investment management of a J-REIT must be delegated to an investment manager registered under the FIEA, and investment trusts may only be established by an investment manager registered under the FIEA to engage in investment trust management business. There are additional rules and regulations that apply to investment management of J-REIT and investment trusts.
Investment decisions for TMKs may be made by the TMK itself, often based on investment advice from a registered investment adviser. Alternatively, the TMK may delegate investment management to an investment manager, which needs to be registered under the FIEA if the TMK invests in securities.
As discussed in 2.2 Regulatory Regime for Funds, if an offering is regarded as a public offering under the FIEA, requirement to file securities registration statement and other disclosure requirements apply.
In addition to the requirement to provide sufficient information for the investor to make an investment decision, certain disclosure documents must be provided to the investor if the investor is not a professional investor (tokuteitoshika) under the FIEA.
Also, any person soliciting investors who are not “professional investors” (tokuteitoshika) under the FIEA (or certain other investors), with respect to an investment in an alternative fund, must provide an explanation of certain important matters relating to such prospective investment under the Act on Provision of Financial Services and the Development of the Accessible Environment Thereto.
Moreover, if an Article 63 Notice is filed by the general partner, the general partner will be required to:
Separate reporting requirements are applicable to J-REITs and investment trusts.
Japan is a relatively high-tax jurisdiction, and it is important that non-Japanese investors investing in alternative funds in Japan ensure that the structures concerned are tax-optimal, so as to minimise the exposure of non-Japanese investors through their Japanese investments in such alternative funds.
Under the applicable Japanese tax laws, non-Japanese resident investors without a permanent establishment in Japan (offshore investors) are generally not subject to tax on capital gains from the sale of shares of a Japanese company, unless certain enumerated exceptions apply. There are three main exceptions that are relevant to offshore investors, as follows:
In addition to capital gains, certain types of income (eg, dividends, interest and distribution under a TK agreement) derived by offshore investors will be subject to withholding tax at varying rates. Both capital gains and other income may be subject to a reduction or exemption under applicable tax treaties, as discussed in 4.7 Double Tax Treaties. These tax consequences for offshore investors vary depending on the type of vehicle used by the alternative fund, as summarised below. See 4.6 Tax Regime for Investors for the taxation of investors in Japan.
Tax Treatment of NKs
An NK is transparent for Japanese tax purposes and, as such, each partner in an NK is viewed as earning its allocated share of income derived by the NK. However, since the NK is typically managed in Japan and has one or more partners that are resident there, there is generally a high risk that offshore investors in an NK will be deemed to have a permanent establishment in Japan. This is because the Japanese tax authorities take the position that if even a single partner in an NK has a permanent establishment in Japan, then all the offshore investors in the NK are deemed to have a permanent establishment, based on the view that an NK’s business is operated jointly by all partners. Unlike in the case of an investment made through an IBLP (discussed below), no statutory exemption is available to permit offshore investors in an NK to be exempted from being deemed to have a permanent establishment in Japan.
If an offshore investor investing through the NK is deemed to have a permanent establishment in relation to the business of the NK, the NK will be subject to withholding on distributions of the partnership profits to such partners at a rate of 20.42%. A non-resident partner who is deemed to have a permanent establishment in Japan will be required to file a tax return to report its share of income from the NK. This makes an NK relatively unsuited for use by offshore investors for Japan-focused investments.
Tax Treatment of IBLPs
An IBLP is treated as being transparent for Japanese tax purposes and, as such, each partner in an IBLP is viewed as earning its allocated share of income derived from the IBLP. As mentioned above, while offshore investors are generally not subject to tax on capital gains from the sale of shares of a Japanese company, there are three exceptions under which their capital gains become subject to tax. Since it is uncommon to use an IBLP for investment in real estate (see 2.1 Types of Alternative Funds and Structures regarding restrictions on the types of assets in which an IBLP is permitted to invest), the other two exceptions are discussed below.
Permanent Establishment (PE)
The Japanese tax authorities’ position discussed above with respect to NKs applies equally to IBLPs. As such, in the absence of an available exemption (discussed below), an offshore investor will be deemed to have a permanent establishment in Japan if it invests in an IBLP that has a partner with a permanent establishment in Japan (eg, if its managing entity conducts business in Japan).
In contrast to an IBLP, if a fund is established as a legal entity outside Japan and is not managed in Japan, it may be possible to structure the fund so that it does not cause offshore investors to be deemed to have a permanent establishment in Japan. As the analysis is complex, sponsors and offshore investors should discuss the tax implications of an investment in a fund organised as a non-Japanese legal entity carefully with their tax advisers in Japan.
PE Exemption Filings
Pursuant to a proposal by the Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) intended to facilitate investment in Japanese alternative funds by offshore investors, the 2009 annual tax reforms introduced a safe harbour that permits offshore investors to invest through such funds, notwithstanding the fact that they may be otherwise deemed to have a permanent establishment in Japan. To take advantage of the safe harbour, offshore investors are required to make a filing to perfect the exemption. In order to qualify for the exemption, the offshore investor must:
Three factors limit the use of the PE exemption filing (and the 25/5 Rule exemption filing discussed below) for Japanese buyout funds:
The “25/5 Rule”
Under the 25/5 Rule, an offshore investor will become subject to tax on capital gains from the sale of shares of a Japanese company if the offshore investor owns, or is deemed to own, 25% or more of the shares of the underlying Japanese company during the three-year period ending on the close of the fiscal year of the offshore investor in which the offshore investor sells, or is deemed to have sold, 5% or more of such company’s shares. While an IBLP is treated as transparent for Japanese tax purposes, where the offshore investor invests through a fund structure as a pass-through partnership (eg, as an IBLP), an aggregation rule applies for the purposes of calculating the 25% and 5% thresholds under the 25/5 Rule. Under this aggregation rule, an offshore investor’s holdings are aggregated with all of the offshore investor’s “specially related shareholders”, which are deemed to include all of the other partners in the fund in which the offshore investor invests. As with a permanent establishment, the analysis is complex, and sponsors and offshore investors should discuss the tax implications of an investment in a fund organised as a pass-through partnership carefully with their tax advisers in Japan.
Two safe harbours from capital gains taxation under the 25/5 Rule may potentially be available for offshore investors investing through a fund structured as an IBLP:
25/5 Rule Exemption Filings
The 2009 annual tax reform that introduced the PE exemption safe harbour also introduced a separate safe harbour to permit offshore investors to invest through such funds, notwithstanding the fact that the fund in the aggregate owns, or is deemed to own, 25% or more of the shares of any underlying Japanese portfolio company. To take advantage of the safe harbour, an offshore investor is required to make a filing to perfect the exemption. In order to qualify for the exemption, the offshore investor must:
This exemption does not apply if the relevant fund has held the shares for a period of less than one year at the time of sale. Note, also, that the limitations applicable with respect to PE exemption filings (discussed above) also apply to 25/5 Rule exemption filings.
Tax Treaty Benefits
Even if capital gains derived by offshore investors become taxable under the 25/5 Rule, an offshore investor may still be able to rely on an available tax treaty between Japan and the jurisdiction in which the offshore investor is considered to be resident under such tax treaty. This is discussed in more detail in 4.7 Double Tax Treaties.
Tax Treatment of GK-TK Structures
A GK itself is opaque for Japanese tax purposes and is therefore required to file a tax return to report its income each fiscal year. However, under a GK-TK structure, profits allocated to the TK investors are deductible in calculating the taxable corporate income of the GK, and would therefore be subject to tax only once at the level of TK investors, not at the level of the GK. A GK conducting its business in Japan will have withholding tax obligations for the distribution of its profits to TK investors at a rate of 20.42%.
Tax Treatment of TMKs
A TMK is opaque for Japanese tax purposes and is therefore required to file a tax return to report its income each fiscal year. However, dividends paid out to its investors are deductible in calculating the taxable corporate income of the TMK, subject to the TMK satisfying certain conditions, including a requirement to distribute as dividends more than 90% of the distributable profits of the TMK in the same fiscal year. As long as all such conditions are met, profits earned and paid out as dividends by a TMK would be subject to tax only once at the level of its investors, and not at the level of the TMK itself. A TMK will have a withholding tax obligation for dividends at a rate of 20.42%. Depending on the particular circumstances, non-resident investors in a TMK may be required to file tax returns to report capital gains from alienation of their interest in the TMK.
Tax Treatment of the Investment Corporation of a J-REIT
The investment corporation of a J-REIT is itself opaque for Japanese tax purposes and is therefore required to file a tax return to report its income each fiscal year. However, as with a TMK, dividends paid out to its investors are deductible in calculating the taxable corporate income of the investment corporation if the investment corporation meets certain conditions, including a requirement to distribute as dividends more than 90% of the distributable profits of the investment corporation in the same fiscal year. As long as all such conditions are met, profits earned and paid out as dividends by the investment corporation will be subject to tax only once at the level of its investors, and not at the level of the investment corporation itself. An investment corporation will have a withholding tax obligation for such dividends (applicable withholding tax rates differ depending on whether the investment corporation is listed on an exchange and whether the recipient is a corporate entity or individual). Depending on the particular circumstances, non-resident investors in the investment corporation may be required to file tax returns to report capital gains from alienation of their interest in the investment corporation.
It is possible to originate loans in Japan if the funds comply with the applicable laws, rules and regulations. Direct lending to any person in Japan is generally regulated under the Money Lending Business Act and requires that a lender be registered thereunder. These regulations are also applicable to alternative funds; depending on the legal structure of the alternative fund, the fund or its general partner will need to be registered as a moneylender if the lending activities are considered to take place in Japan and lending is considered to be conducted as a business.
There are limited exemptions from the requirement to register as a moneylender – for example, if an alternative investment fund holds 50% or more of the voting rights in a Japanese portfolio company, direct lending to such portfolio company is exempt from this registration requirement.
IBLPs are subject to asset-class restrictions under which they are not permitted to invest in digital assets or consumer loans, and investment in loan portfolios are permitted so long as such loans are made to Japanese companies or natural persons engaging in business. Such restrictions are not, however, applicable to NKs or GK-TK structures, subject to compliance with other applicable requirements under the FIEA.
J-REITs and investment trusts are also subject to asset-class restrictions and may not invest in digital assets, but investment in consumer loans and other loans are permitted.
Cannabis is prohibited under Japanese law.
It is common for alternative funds (particularly private equity funds, real estate funds and infrastructure funds) to use subsidiaries for investment purposes. The primary reasons for the use of subsidiaries include taking advantage of debt-to-equity leverage at the subsidiary level and segregating liabilities within each investment.
For IBLPs, as discussed in 2.2 Regulatory Regime for Funds, the general partner may manage the assets of the partnership by filing an Article 63 Notice and qualifying under the QII Exemption, and there is no requirement for the general partner to appoint a local investment manager. If the general partner wishes to delegate investment management in securities or derivatives to an investment manager, the investment manager must be a registered investment manager under the FIEA. A non-Japanese entity can be registered as an investment manager under the FIEA, but must have an office in Japan.
For NKs, there is no requirement for the executive partner to be a Japanese entity or person. For a GK-TK structure, as discussed in 2.1 Types of Alternative Funds and Structures, the GK is typically a Japanese limited liability company, although it is possible, but rare, for a non-Japanese entity to enter into a TK agreement with an investor. However, as with IBLPs, if investment management in securities or derivatives is delegated to an investment manager, the investment manager must be registered under the FIEA.
An investment manager or investment adviser to a TMK must be registered as an investment manager or investment adviser under the FIEA. For J-REITs and investment trusts, as discussed in 2.2 Regulatory Regime for Funds, the investment manager must be registered in this capacity under the FIEA.
While there is no particular local substance rule other than as discussed above, Japanese alternative fund vehicles are generally established and managed by local entities.
There are no specific rules applicable to service providers of IBLPs, NKs or GK-TK structures, or the operators of such fund vehicles, other than the requirement regarding the delegation of investment management as discussed in 2.8 Local/Presence Requirement for Funds. Customary services provided by administrators and custodians are generally not regulated in Japan.
As J-REITs and investment trusts are strictly regulated, service providers need to meet certain requirements under the Act on Investment Trusts and Investment Corporations, and are usually local entities.
There is no anticipated forthcoming change to the fund regulations in a short term.
Generally speaking, blind-pool alternative funds established in Japan, whether private equity, real estate or infrastructure, tend to be set up predominantly by domestic sponsors. Some of the larger buyout funds that invest in Japan, whether as a Japan-focused, pan-regional or global investment strategy, are established in offshore jurisdictions due to legal, tax and regulatory considerations. For real estate and infrastructure funds investing in Japan, an offshore feeder fund is commonly established, with non-Japanese investors investing into the offshore feeder, which then invests in a GK-TK or TMK arrangement when investing in particular transactions in Japan. Sponsors of these funds are typically a mix of domestic and overseas players, where these firms are established and operate in multiple jurisdictions, including Japan, and onshore feeder may also be established for investment by Japanese investors.
In the case of IBLPs, the general partner is often established as a joint stock company (kabushikikaisha or KK under the Companies Act), a GK or an LLP, and the general partner often manages the fund under QII Exemption. In the case of a GK-TK arrangement, the GK is a limited liability company (godokaisha) established under the Companies Act, but it is possible for an entity other than a GK to enter into a TK agreement with the investor. If an investment manager is appointed by the general partner of IBLP, such investment manager must be registered as investment manager under the FIEA, and therefore is likely a KK established in Japan.
Investment managers of J-REITs and investment trusts are required to be Japanese corporations (KKs, in particular).
See 2.1 Types of Alternative Funds and Structures and 2.2 Regulatory Regime for Funds for an outline of the regulatory regime and disclosure requirements applicable to alternative fund managers. Alternative fund managers such as a general partner of IBLP, a TK operator in GK-TK structure and investment managers of JRIETs and investment trusts have a duty of prudent manager and a duty of loyalty – generally understood to be equivalent or similar to a fiduciary duty – towards investors.
In Japan, there is no special tax regime applicable to fund managers, whether alternative funds or otherwise, and the tax treatment of management fees and carried interest received from funds are determined in accordance with the general rules of Japanese tax law. In practice, managers of alternative funds are typically vehicles that are either:
In each case, individual managers receive their management fees and carried interest from such vehicle. Below is a tax summary of the treatment in each case.
In order to encourage foreign funds to invest in Japanese securities, the Financial Services Agency published guidelines for an “independent agent exemption” with respect to fund managers, in consultation with the Tax Bureau of the Ministry of Finance and the National Tax Agency. While these guidelines are not prepared specifically for alternative funds, it would not be unreasonable to refer to them in analysing any “agent permanent establishment” issues in the context of alternative funds.
Under the guidelines, when a foreign fund enters into a discretionary investment agreement with a domestic investment manager and the domestic investment manager conducts certain investment activities in Japan under the discretionary investment agreement on behalf of such fund, that domestic investment manager would be considered to be an “independent agent”, thereby not constituting an “agent permanent establishment” of the fund if all of the following conditions are met:
Separately, where applicable, the offshore investors may also rely on the PE exemption filing discussed in 2.4 Tax Regime for Funds.
In Japan, there is no special legislative rule for the taxation of carried interest, and therefore its tax treatment is determined by applying the general rules of Japanese tax law.
Where the Vehicle Used for the Alternative Fund Manager is Opaque for Japanese Tax Purposes
Since it can be assumed that individual managers receive carried interest from the vehicle in consideration for their services provided in their capacity as officers or employees of the vehicle, carried interest can be expected to be treated as “salary income” of such individual managers, and would therefore be subject to tax under progressive tax rates, up to a maximum rate of 55.945% (see also 3.4 Tax Regime for Managers).
Where the Vehicle Used for the Alternative Fund Manager is Transparent for Japanese Tax Purposes
There are two different views on the tax treatment of carried interest in this case. One view is that, as with management fees discussed in 3.4 Tax Regime for Managers, carried interest received by individual managers would be viewed as remuneration paid to them in consideration for their services and thus treated as “business income” or “miscellaneous income” of such individual managers, both of which are subject to tax under progressive tax rates (up to a maximum rate of 55.945%). The other view is that, since the vehicle is tax transparent, individual managers would be viewed as having directly earned their allocated shares of the income derived by the fund, and the character of such income at the fund level would be respected in determining the tax treatment of carried interest at the level of individual managers. Under this view, where the source of carried interest is capital gains from the alienation of securities by the fund, carried interest received by individual managers would also be treated as capital gains from the alienation of securities, subject to tax at a flat rate of 20.315%.
While both of these views are possible under the law, the Financial Services Agency published a notice summarising the tax treatment of carried interest received by individual managers under certain circumstances in 2021, with the aim of promoting Japan as an international finance hub, to which the National Tax Agency confirmed that it had no objections. According to this notice, carried interest to be paid as a distribution of partnership profits to its partners would be treated as capital gains from the alienation of securities, subject to tax at a flat rate of 20.315%, if certain conditions specified therein are met.
Managers of alternative investment funds are permitted to appoint sub-advisers and delegate their investment management functions or outsource other operations of the funds to third parties. To the extent that the fund documents permit such delegation or outsourcing, there are no particular laws or regulations that restrict or regulate such delegation or outsourcing, subject to the service provider holding the appropriate licences and registrations, if the provision of such services requires any such licence or registration. For example, if the function of investment management in securities or derivatives is outsourced, as discussed in 2.8 Local/Presence Requirements for Funds, such investment functions may only be delegated to an investment manager registered under the FIEA.
See 2.8 Local/Presence Requirements for Funds for requirements regarding the general partner of an IBLP or NK, or the TK operator of a TK.
If the fund manager that has filed Article 63 Notification merges, sells its business or engages in other restructuring or similar transaction, the fund manager may be required to notify the Japanese regulators after such transaction takes place. However, no approvals are required for such restructuring of the fund manager or its parent company. A separate set of regulations apply to fund managers that are registered as investment managers under the FIEA.
There are no regulatory requirements or limitations in connection with the use of artificial intelligence, predictive data or big data either for investment purposes or for operational/compliance purposes, but appropriate disclosure of investment process and use of artificial intelligence, predictive data or big data should be made if such information may affect the investment decisions of the investors.
No substantial changes to the regulations relating to alternative fund managers that are not registered as investment managers under the FIEA are expected in the short term. On the other hand, the amendments to the FIEA, including certain changes to the registration requirements for investment manager under the FIEA, including permitting outsourcing of certain middle- and back-office functions to a registered service provider, are scheduled to become effective before May of 2025.
Japanese investors naturally make up a significant proportion of investors in Japanese alternative funds, but investors from many foreign jurisdictions commonly invest in these funds as well. Investors from Asia, Europe, North America, Oceania and occasionally the Middle East and other jurisdictions are not uncommon, although, for tax and other reasons, investing through an offshore feeder instead of investing directly in Japanese alternative funds is more popular for offshore investors.
Side letters are permitted, and no special approval or disclosure is required by law. There is also no requirement to offer side letter rights to certain investors. However, careful consideration should be given to the contents and disclosures of side letters to ensure that they are not considered misleading or incorrect.
Please see 2.2 Regulatory Regime for Funds for information on marketing of alternative funds to investors.
Please see 2.2 Regulatory Regime for Funds and 2.3 Disclosure/Reporting Requirements for discussions of rules concerning marketing of alternative funds.
The use of placement agents is common in Japan, but many alternative fund managers also market the fund themselves. A placement agent that engages in solicitation activities in Japan must be registered as Type I or Type II financial instruments business operator, depending on the type of fund it will be offering in Japan. Alternative fund managers, such as the general partner of an IBLP and TK operator of a GK-TK structure may engage in marketing activities by filing an Article 63 Notification and the personnel of the alternative fund managers may be compensated for sales efforts. Investment managers of a TMK, JREIT and investment trust need to be registered as Type I or Type II financial instruments business operators, as applicable, to engage in marketing activities.
There are no special or preferential tax regimes in Japan that might be available to investors in alternative funds, so the tax treatment of such investors is determined under general Japanese tax laws and principles. See also 2.4 Tax Regime for Funds for the tax treatment of offshore investors.
Taxation of Corporate Investors in Japan
Corporate investors resident in Japan are generally subject to Japanese taxation on their worldwide income. One exception is that a certain portion of dividends received from the fund may be excluded from the amount of such investor’s taxable corporate income, depending on the circumstances and whether such dividends are deductible at the level of the distributing entity. The income of a corporate investor is taxed at the effective tax rate of approximately 30% (or 34% if the corporate investor is not subject to size-based business taxation under the Local Tax Act), without regard to type of income.
Taxation of Individual Investors in Japan
While the income of individual investors resident in Japan is generally taxed under progressive tax rates (up to a maximum rate of 55.945%), capital gains from the alienation of securities are taxed at a flat rate of 20.315%. Depending on the circumstances, individual investors who receive dividends from a fund vehicle, the equity interest of which is listed on an exchange, may be able to opt to be taxed at a flat rate of 20.315% with respect to such dividends.
Timing of Taxation
Where the alternative fund is opaque for Japanese tax purposes (eg, a TMK or an investment corporation established in Japan), Japanese investors are subject to tax upon the receipt of profit distributions from the fund or the alienation of their interest in the fund.
Conversely, where the alternative fund is transparent for Japanese tax purposes (eg, an NK or a partnership-type entity established in Japan), Japanese investors are subject to tax on their allocated share of the income derived from the fund each fiscal year, regardless of whether such income has been distributed. Since the fund is transparent, the character of such income at the fund level would generally be respected in determining tax treatment at the investor level. However, see 3.6 Taxation of Carried Interest.
In the case of a GK-TK structure, while the GK itself is opaque for Japanese tax purposes, TK investors would be subject to tax for profits allocated to them each year, whether distributed or not; however, unlike an NK or a partnership-type fund, income from such allocated profits would generally be treated as “miscellaneous income”, regardless of the character of the income at the GK level.
Japan has an extensive double-tax treaty network, and the Japanese government is actively seeking to expand it further. Not every jurisdiction has a tax treaty with Japan, however, and the benefits may vary significantly between jurisdictions, so any investor seeking to invest in Japan while relying on tax treaty benefits should consult its own tax adviser to understand whether and to what extent such benefits may be available.
Whether alternative funds established in Japan qualify for benefits under an applicable double-tax treaty generally depends on whether the relevant vehicle used for such funds is transparent or opaque for Japanese tax purposes, as explained below. It should be noted, however, that where an alternative fund established in Japan derives income from a foreign jurisdiction (source jurisdiction), whether such fund would be entitled to benefits under the applicable double-tax treaty for such income is ultimately a question of tax law in the source jurisdiction (including interpretation of the treaty in that jurisdiction).
Where the Vehicle Used for the Alternative Fund is Opaque for Japanese Tax Purposes
Depending on the terms of the double-tax treaty between Japan and the source jurisdiction, the fund may qualify for benefits under such treaty (eg, reduction in or exemption of withholding tax in the source jurisdiction).
Where the Vehicle Used for the Alternative Fund is Transparent for Japanese Tax Purposes
The fund itself would not generally qualify for benefits under the double-tax treaty between Japan and the source jurisdiction. However, investors in the fund may qualify for benefits under the double-tax treaty between the jurisdiction of their residence and the source jurisdiction, depending on the terms of such treaty.
FATCA
Japanese alternative funds are “financial institutions” under FATCA. Japan and the United States have entered into a Model 2 intergovernmental agreement with respect to FATCA, under which Japanese alternative funds are required to comply with certain due diligence, reporting and withholding obligations. Information with respect to US investors and non-compliant investors must be reported to the US Internal Revenue Service on an annual basis. If a Japanese alternative fund does not comply with its reporting obligations, payments of interest and dividends from certain US sources may be subject to withholding tax at a rate of 30%.
CRS
The Japanese government has also amended domestic law to implement the CRS published by the OECD. Under the amended law, each of the following is subject to certain compliance obligations, including identification and reporting of the tax residence and beneficial owners of their clients (ie, their investors) to the Japanese tax authorities, which will then exchange this information with tax authorities in other relevant jurisdictions under the automatic exchange of information (AEOI) framework:
The AML/KYC regulations under Japanese law are basically set forth in the Act on Prevention of Transfer of Criminal Proceeds. The Act provides for detailed rules concerning AML/KYC, including the investor verification requirements, record-keeping requirements, and the obligation to report suspicious transactions. Moreover, alternative fund managers regulated under the FIEA, including those that have filed the Article 63 Notification, are required to comply with the AML Guidelines issued by the FSA which require the regulated entities, among other things, to identify, assess and mitigate risk using a risk-based approach and review and monitor the effectiveness of the AML programme.
The Personal Information Protection Act regulates the handling of personal information, including restrictions on cross-border transfer of personal information. Protection of client information and data security is required for any financial institution regulated under the FIEA, including the alternative fund manager that has filed the Article 63 Notification.
No substantial changes to the regulations relating to discussed throughout 4.Investors are expected in the short term.
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www.simpsonthacher.com / www.noandt.com/enAlternative Funds in Japan: An Overview
Despite continued challenges globally and regionally within Asia, Japan has remained a bright spot for the alternative investment industry, with fundraising and deal activity increasing markedly from mid-2023 into the first half of 2024. Globally, private equity deal activity has been relatively flat over most of the past year, with a continuing slump in exits extending through the first half of 2024, causing sponsors to spend longer in the market during their fundraises. Within Asia, fundraising and deal activity has continued to fall sharply in China, which had long been the dominant private equity market in the region. By contrast, fundraising and deal activity have grown impressively in Japan, where deal values in 2023 rose over 183% compared with the prior five-year average, according to Bain & Company’s Asia Private Equity Report 2024, and reported fundraising reached USD4.7 billion through August 2024, roughly equivalent to the total amount raised in 2023, according to PitchBook. (Deal value as reported by PitchBook has fallen year-on-year in the first half of 2024, largely due to the impact of the JPY2 trillion Toshiba acquisition in 2023, but is likely to remain on its upward trajectory compared to the prior five-year average.) The combination of China’s decline in fundraising and deal activity and Japan’s increase has transformed the regional landscape, with Japan overtaking China to become the leading private equity deal market by value for the first time in 2023. Japan is now likely to become the leading alternative investments fundraising and deal-making centre in Asia if current trends continue.
The core factors driving increased deal-making and fundraising activity in Japan have remained largely the same over the past decade. These include demographic and structural shifts, effective governmental stewardship, and low financing costs keyed off the Bank of Japan’s ultra-low interest rate. These factors have helped to create an environment that has been conducive to the growth of private equity in Japan.
Japan is a receptive market for alternative investments, in part because it has a well-developed economy with small, but growing, M&A and PE exposure, leaving substantial room for future expansion of the industry. Depending on the metrics, Japan is the third- or fourth-largest economy in the world by GDP, with a robust pool of successful family- and founder-run businesses that lack successors or the capacity to institutionalise. According to the Organization for Small and Medium Enterprises and Regional Innovation, Japan (SMRJ), and the Japan Finance Corporation,
over 99% of all businesses in Japan were small- and medium-sized enterprises, employing 68.8% of Japan’s workforce, in 2023. And despite a significant uptick in Japanese private equity M&A activity, PE and M&A deal penetration remains one of the lowest among the world’s leading developed economies. Although M&A as a percentage of GDP increased from an average of 2% from 2015 to 2021 to 3% for the period between 2019 and 2023, and PE as a percentage of GDP doubled from 0.2% between 2015 and 2021 to 0.4% between 2019 and 2023, according to the Japan Private Equity Association, M&A penetration remains among the lowest of developed economies, and PE penetration remains far below Japan’s counterparts in Germany (0.7%), South Korea (0.7%), France (0.9%), the US (1.3%) and the UK (1.9%).
Meanwhile, demographic and structural shifts within Japan continue to make private equity firms highly suitable partners for Japan’s small- and medium- sized businesses. Japan continues to be at the leading edge of a global population decline, with declining birth rates and increasing life spans contributing to an increasingly inverted population pyramid. This has left otherwise successful family and founder-run businesses without successors, unable to maintain continuity for their companies, and creating a strong opportunity for private equity. Additionally, despite a robust track record of innovation and technical skill, Japanese companies have been slow to take advantage of recent advances in e-commerce, artificial intelligence and big data, and the digital transformation has yet to be fully realised, even within some of Japan’s renowned tech businesses. The COVID-19 pandemic, together with increased competition and steadily decreasing traditional retail sales, has driven Japanese companies that have so far been slow to digitally transform to look for partners to help them change in order to sustain their businesses. For larger companies, government reforms, including the 2019 Fair M&A Guidelines, the tightening of Tokyo Stock Exchange listing criteria in 2022, and new guidelines for corporate takeovers, together with increasing shareholder activism, have refocused larger conglomerates on stock performance. This, in turn, has generally led these companies to focus more on core businesses, contributing to increasing sales of non-core assets, creating opportunities for buyers in the private equity space. At the other end of the alternatives spectrum, venture capital continues to inject capital into start-ups and early-stage companies, helping to develop a well-rounded ecosystem for private equity investment.
Macro factors have also bolstered Japan’s appeal, particularly for international investors. Japan’s private equity M&A penetration, while growing, remains low compared to other developed countries, indicating capacity for future growth. The recent historical weakness of the Japanese yen against the US dollar and other major currencies has also created an opportunity for foreign investors to “buy low” on Japanese alternative assets, particularly in the real estate space. Additionally, while the Bank of Japan recently reversed a decades-old policy of negative or near-negative interest rates with two record interest-rate hikes this year, interest rates remain historically low, and low in absolute terms versus other developed countries, keeping the cost of capital inexpensive by international standards. Entry multiples also remain quite weak compared to other jurisdictions, making Japanese alternative investments even more attractive for international investors.
Against this backdrop, several emerging trends seem likely to impact the Japanese alternative investments industry. The government and businesses have been pioneering new distribution channels to Japanese HNWI and retail investors, both formally through modification of the Japan Investment Trust Association rules relating to distribution of alternative asset products to Japanese retail investors, and informally through the launch of LUCA, Japan’s first democratisation portal. Additionally, there has been increasing diversification in Japan’s alternative investment offerings. In 2024, the former deputy director of Carlyle Japan, backed by a group of Japan’s key financial investors, formed a new firm that pivots from a buyout strategy to a minority “engagement” strategy, focused on making meaningful minority investments in publicly listed Japanese mid- and large-cap companies. This represents a significant shift in mindset, with a recognition that, while private equity has been generally helpful in the small- and mid-cap private equity space, its track record has arguably been more mixed, with larger, more diversified companies.
Meanwhile, Pan-Asia PE firms with significant China exposure have pivoted to Japan, mainly where these firms have established a successful track record for Japanese investments. Also, several global players have targeted country-specific funds, particularly in the real estate sector. Additionally, there seems to be significant interest in Japan-focused or Japan-heavy credit funds and secondary funds, and, despite significant tax, legal and regulatory challenges, Japanese sponsors executed the first major Japanese GP-led secondaries transactions in 2023, with potentially more to follow.
New Distribution Channels for Alternative Investment Products
HNWI and retail distribution channels for registered funds products
In recent years, the largest global sponsors have pioneered new distribution channels globally, looking to reach new non-institutional sources of capital, including high net worth investors (HNWIs), insurance companies and retail investors. This has meant the development of innovative new fund structures for HNWIs, as well as very substantial fundraising from retail investors in private real estate and private credit funds, and the development and expansion of business development companies (BDCs), non-traded BDCs, REITs and permanent capital vehicles in North America and Luxembourg SICAVs in Europe. The alternative investment industry has been actively developing similar distribution channels in Japan, with major developments expected in 2024.
For several years, non-Japanese sponsors of alternative investment products have been able to access new channels to distribute their alternative products to HNWIs and retail investors in Japan. This was typically carried out by partnering with a local Japanese distributor who would form, own and/or operate a trust that would invest into, for example, a non-listed US REIT and distribute units in the Cayman unit trust to Japanese HNWIs through a public offering in Japan.
In 2023, the Japanese government announced its plan to turn Japan into a “leading asset management center” through a “Basic Policy on Economic and Fiscal Management and Reform”. In accordance with the new Basic Policy, the Financial Services Agency of Japan (FSA) announced the establishment of an Asset Management Task Force, which issued a report in late 2023 proposing certain regulatory amendments and new initiatives, including the relaxation of rules governing the distribution of foreign alternative asset products in Japan. In line with these reforms, the Japanese self-regulatory organisation that sets the rules for distribution of investment trusts in Japan has started reviewing its rules and interpretive guidelines with a view to relaxing certain restrictions on the distribution of unlisted foreign alternative investments into Japan in the form of publicly offered domestic investment trusts. It is anticipated that these reforms will lead to a more market-friendly environment for alternative investment funds in Japan, where registered alternative investment products can be more freely distributed to Japan’s HNWI and retail investors through the established infrastructure of Japan’s leading distributors.
New “Democratisation” Portals
In parallel with the push by large global alternative investment fund sponsors into new distribution channels, so-called “democratisation” platforms have been quietly – and sometimes not so quietly – revolutionising alternative asset investing in ways some have likened to the revolutionalisation of knowledge transmission by the printing press. Historically, investment in alternative assets has mostly been limited to highly sophisticated institutional investors. Technology and the Internet have increasingly disrupted this set pattern, shrinking the world and making it easier for alternative investment fund sponsors to connect with a broader investment base, including individual investors. Technology is also helping to remove some of the complexity involved in investing in alternative assets, making complex asset classes more accessible to non-institutional investors.
This is a significant development for the alternative investments industry globally. It means potentially enabling a broad range of non-institutional investors, including individuals, to access, evaluate and invest in sophisticated alternative investment products for the first time. And this innovation is not necessarily constrained by geography or language. The innovators and disruptors are forming new democratisation portals that give individual investors a web-based interface with access to alternative investment products across a potentially broad range of sectors and geographies, leveraging technology to provide investors with the tools to evaluate these investment products. The promise of these portals is that they can make alternative investments accessible – if not to everyone then at least to a far broader pool of investors than previously thought possible. Examples of such platforms in the US and Europe include Crowdstreet, Cadre, Moonfare and Fundrise, among others.
Japan’s first democratisation portal, LUCA Japan, was formally launched in 2024. At launch, LUCA Japan permitted individual investors to invest as little as USD200,000, and, according to PEI, aimed to provide investment options spanning private equity, private credit, private equity secondaries, venture capital funds, and private sports funds. LUCA’s objective is to enable both domestic and international GPs to market and raise capital for fund products online, which makes it a potentially significant disruptor of traditional distribution channels, lowering the cost and complexity of raising capital for alternative investment products. This could be particularly appealing in Japan, where fund sizes tend to lag those in other markets, and where the tax, legal and regulatory regime tends to be heavy and challenging. LUCA could also help the Japanese government achieve a key policy objective in providing individual domestic investors – who have generally had limited access to foreign alternative investment products – with access to such products.
Democratisation portals must, of course, operate within a complex and highly regulated market. Depending on the context, responsibility could fall not only on the fund sponsor but also on the democratisation platforms themselves to ensure investor eligibility and legal compliance with applicable securities and marketing regimes, and to ensure that the portal will not cause sponsors any loss of their exemptions. This is a challenge in any jurisdiction, but all the more so for Japan, where a web of both Japanese and international securities, tax and AML regimes must be properly navigated. This complexity could have some upside, however, in that accommodating these challenges could help raise the overall standards of the Japanese alternative asset management industry to global first-in-class level – at least that is the hope of LUCA founder, Keiko Sydenham. Democratisation portals are still in their infancy, but all signs indicate that this is a trend that is likely to have a significant impact on the alternative investments industry in Japan and globally.
Minority Public Equities and Engagement Strategies
While there seems to be broad consensus that the traditional private equity buyout model has worked well in the small- and mid-cap space, providing important solutions in the founder-succession and special situations context, finding a niche in corporate carve-outs of non-core businesses, and helping otherwise high performing Japanese companies harness digital technologies to transform and be competitive in the digital age, the situation has been more mixed for large-cap buyout investments. Large-cap buyouts, by their nature, create exposure to concentration risk, particularly for relatively smaller funds, which must often put together a consortium and take on significant leverage to fund the investment. This exposure may be greater in Japan, where fund sizes of domestic GPs have tended to be smaller than those of their global counterparts. Buyers and investors alike have also sometimes found that Japanese large-cap companies are resistant to change, leaving new owners with relatively fewer effective levers than anticipated before acquiring the target company. This has led some in the industry to speculate that alternatives to the traditional buyout strategy might be more effective in the upper mid- and large-cap space, including minority investments in public equity. A handful of Japanese private equity firms have begun pursuing such strategies, seeking to make improvements at mid- and large-cap publicly listed Japanese companies through minority public investments, either as an alternative or to round out their buyout strategies.
There is significant diversity in these models, including the use of hybrid fund structures (with features from both private equity and hedge funds), open-ended funds with long lock-up periods and limited redemption (to reinforce a long-term investment horizon), and closed-ended funds (making PIPES investments alongside the sponsor’s flagship buyout fund).
A Shift Towards Japan
As global alternative investors have pivoted away from China, sponsors have shifted towards Japan, seeking to take advantage of more attractive investment opportunities and the increasing appetite for Japan exposure of international investors. A number of PE firms with a China-heavy pan-Asia focus either increased allocations in their pan-Asia funds to Japan, launched new country-specific Japan funds, or both. Additionally, global sponsors have started to focus more on Japan, building up domestic resources and launching country-specific funds. Multiple global sponsors now tout Japan-specific country funds, including Carlyle’s fifth Japan buyout fund, which held its final closing in May 2024 at JPY430 billion, and Bain Capital’s inaugural Japan Middle Market Fund, which closed in 2021 with USD1 billion in commitments. A number of other global sponsors are also reported to be launching or considering Japan-specific strategies, including in real estate funds. As a result of these developments, the Japanese alternative investment funds market seems likely to more closely resemble the markets in other mature international financial hubs, with a diversity of strategies pursued by both on-shore and offshore sponsors.
New Alternative Asset Classes – Secondaries and Credit
Secondaries
Secondaries are one of the fastest-growing alternative asset classes globally. The COVID-19 pandemic, inflation, rising PE ratios and a lack of liquidity have created a challenging exit environment for GPs globally in recent years. GP-led secondaries, in particular, have provided solutions for GPs seeking to maximize portfolio value and achieve liquidity at the end of the life of their funds and exits to a continuation vehicle funded by secondary investors can represent a creative way to generate liquidity and crystalise profits. Secondary solutions may also be effective ways to harness synergies through platform investments, conglomerating assets, often as part of a buy-and-build strategy. These trends have driven GP-led secondaries deal volume to increase roughly five-fold globally over the past five years.
While there has been much interest in GP-led secondaries transactions in Japan, and the denominator effect has contributed to LP-led secondaries becoming a key part of the landscape, GP-led transactions have been slower to spread. This is at least in part due to the fact that Japanese GPs have generally not had the types of exit and liquidity challenges faced by their counterparts elsewhere in the world. Inflation remains relatively low, and the Tokyo Stock Exchange continues to provide ample opportunities for IPO exits. Meanwhile, M&A activity has been robust. Japanese GPs have therefore had greater liquidity than compared to their peers in other markets.
Another key challenge has been the Japanese tax and regulatory regime, which presents additional hurdles for these types of transactions. Japanese tax laws tend to make structuring such transactions in a tax-efficient manner challenging, particularly when foreign buyers invest into a continuation fund formed by a domestic sponsor. From a legal perspective, anti-dilution and enforcement rights of the type secondary buyers typically expect remain somewhat novel in some Japanese transaction structures and present difficulties for local advisors trying to create them. Despite these challenges, interest in this transaction structure remains strong and the first major complex multi-asset GP-led secondary transaction was completed in late 2023.
New structural solutions to these hurdles may be developed in future transactions, and future legal and regulatory developments could make it easier for Japanese GP-led secondary transactions in the future. The market is continually changing, and future liquidity challenges in the next economic cycle could alter the calculus for GPs in a way that make GP-led secondary transactions more attractive.
Credit
As with GP-led secondaries, the complexities of the Japanese tax and legal regimes continue to slow the growth of fund finance and credit-focused strategies in Japan. Subscription facilities have continued to become more commonplace, and NAV facilities may be on the horizon. There is also increasing interest among sponsors in private debt strategies. Topaz Capital pioneered the first private debt solutions in Japan a decade ago, but other sponsors have publicly expressed interest in tapping into Japan’s ample lending pool of more than JPY4.5 quadrillion.
Time will tell whether the Japanese alternative investments industry will continue to develop across various sectors and come to resemble that of more mature industries in North America and Europe, but the seeds of that transformation appear to be firmly planted.
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