Disrupting Japan: Startups and Venture Capital in Japan

Disrupting Japan: Startups and Venture Capital in Japan


Inside the government program to invest $1B into Japanese startups

October 14, 2024

The Japanese government is taking a very hands-on approach to funding startups.
Yuka Hata, Senior Managing Director of the Japan Investment Corporation (JIC) explains the kinds of startups and funds they invest in, and why.
We also talk about the two  biggest challenges new Japanese VCs face, and what it’s really like for women in VC in Japan
It's a great conversation, and I think you'll enjoy it.

Show Notes


Why JIC runs private equity and venture capital funds.
Why Japanese companies struggle with secondary offerings
How Japan's low-valuation IPS  hurt deep tech startups in Japan
How JIC's makes investment decisions
Why JIC is investing in foreign VC funds
The two big challenges that new Japanese VCs struggle with
How JIC is using LP investments to change Japanese VC culture
The changing role of women in Japanese VC and how JIC is supporting that change
Two reasons it’s important to attract foreign investors into Japan
What foreigners most misunderstand about Japan's startup ecosystem
A new way for Japanese founders to Go Global

Links from our Guest

Everything you ever wanted to know about Japan Investment Corporation (JIC)
JIC's award for their work on female empowerment
Connect with Yuka on LinkedIn

Transcript
Welcome to Disrupting Japan, Straight Talk from Japan's most innovative founders and investors.
I'm Tim Romero and thanks for joining me.
There is a lot of debate over the role that government should play in fostering innovation. From American founders loudly demanding that the government just get the hell out of their way, while quietly bidding on government contracts and accepting millions in subsidies, to Chinese entrepreneurs double and triple checking that their business plans and public postures are well aligned with the expectations of the central government.
Japan, of course, is taking her own path.
Today we sit down with Yuka Hata, Senior Managing Director of the Japan Investment Corporation, or JIC. Now Yuka will explain all of the details in just a few minutes. But briefly JIC is a government-capitalized organization that invests in VC funds, private equity funds, and also creates its own venture funds in order to make direct startup investments.
Furthermore, JIC's mission is not just changing the economics of Japan's startup ecosystem, but changing the culture of Japan's startup ecosystem as well. And looking around, they seem to be having a real impact.
Yuka and I talk about the kinds of startups and funds that JIC invests in, the two biggest challenges that new Japanese VCs struggle with, and what it's really like for female VCs in Japan right now.
But you know, Yuka tells that story much better than I can. So, let's get right to the interview.

Interview
Tim: So, we're sitting here with Yuka Hata, the Senior Managing Director of Japan Investment Corp, or JIC. So, thanks for sitting down with us.
Yuka: Thank you. Well, thank you so much for inviting me. Such a great opportunity.
Tim: I'm delighted to finally get you on the show. We've been talking about this for a long time.
Yuka: Thank you.
Tim: Well, let's start by talking a bit about JIC. So JIC, you make a lot of investments, but JIC is not really a traditional VC fund. So briefly, what is JIC? What's your mission? What do you do?
Yuka: So, JIC has been created as a government-backed investment fund in 2018, to strengthen global competitiveness of Japan's industry. JIC has a kind of strong mission to support the next generation industry in two ways. One, we have created JIC Capitals, which is a private equity fund to pursue industry consolidation and restructuring. That's more private equity play. And the other side is obviously more venture capital play to create the next strong industry out of our country. For that reason, we created a subsidiary called Venture Growth Investment, and they are providing mainly growth-stage risk capitals. And in addition to that,