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July 8, 2019 10:17 am
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Sony Is the Latest Japanese Company Looking to Tap Israeli Startups With New Fund

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avatar by Meir Orbach / CTech

Journalists wait for Sony Corp’s new President and Chief Executive Officer Kenichiro Yoshida’s news conference on the company’s business plan at Sony’s headquarters in Tokyo, Japan, May 22, 2018. Photo: Reuters / Toru Hanai.

CTech – Sony is the latest Japanese company looking to tap Israeli startups. Last week, the company announced a plan to establish a joint fund with Daiwa Capital Holdings, a subsidiary of Tokyo-listed investment bank Daiwa Securities Group. The fund, called Innovation Growth Ventures (IGV), is aiming to raise $185 million to invest in tech startups in Japan, Europe, the US, and Israel.

In the first half of 2019, Japanese investors backed 34 Israeli companies, up from 28 companies during the entire year 2018, Elchanan S. Harel, president of Harel-Hertz Investment House, an investment firm promoting business between Japan and Israel, said in a recent interview with Calcalist. “There are currently 87 offices in Israel that represent almost all of the leading Japanese corporations, with the exception of Tokyo-listed Sumitomo Corp., who are also planning to inaugurate offices in Israel,” Harel said.

Last week, Tokyo-listed Japanese advertising and public relation corporation Dentsu backed Tel Aviv-based digital communication startup Imprint. Back in June, Dentsu announced it was scouting Israeli startups for investment and collaboration opportunities. To support its operations in Israel, the company set up a new division called the solution intelligence center.

In May, Mitsubishi opened a Tel Aviv liaison office to operate as a business intelligence outpost. Mitsubishi is the third Japanese general trading company to set up a local development center in the country, after the Mitsui Group and the Marubeni Corporation. Japanese multinational the Hitachi Group also has a center in Israel.

In October, Japanese insurance company Sompo Holdings announced it was launching an innovation hub in Tel Aviv, which will serve as a local operational branch of the company’s digital division.

There is a rising trend of Japanese delegations and businesspeople that come to Israel for every tech event to look for potential investments, Guy Lachmann, partner at Pearl Cohen Zedek Latzer Baratz specializing in Japanese relations, told Calcalist in a recent interview.

This trend is growing and more and more Japanese corporations are creating investment funds specifically for Israeli companies, he said.

Trade between Israel and Japan, not including diamonds, amounted to $3.5 billion in 2018, according to the Israeli Ministry of Economy, an increase of around 20 percent from 2017. Overall, Japan is the 11th largest importer of Israeli goods in terms of annual turnover, according to the Israeli Export Institute, and the third largest Asian importer.

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