Japan's listed-company count is set to fall by 58 this year to 3,778, reversing a decade of growth on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, Bloomberg reported Thursday.
The drop reflects a surge in management buyouts, M&A-related delistings and stricter capital-efficiency demands that have also cooled appetite for IPOs, according to the report.
Analysts say fewer small-cap stocks may improve market quality. Amundi Japan's Hiromi Ishihara said many global investors require market caps of around 300 billion yen, a level about 70% of Prime Market firms do not meet, the report said.
Japan's shift mirrors long-running declines in the U.S. and Germany, where listings have contracted sharply over decades. Japanese firms' average market cap has grown just 30% since 2000, far trailing global peers, according to the report.
(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)