Abney and Associates Apple opening new Tokyo store - Deviantart
TOKYO
– Apple Inc. plans to open a store in Tokyo’s upscale Omotesando shopping
district as early as March, adding its first outlet in the city in years as
Japan’s economy recovers, according to a person familiar with the plan.
Construction is scheduled to be completed
by February, the person said, asking not to be identified because they aren’t
authorized to speak for Apple. The store
would be Apple’s first opening in Tokyo since August 2005, according to the
company’s website, which is advertising jobs for a new store in the city.
Takashi Takebayashi, a spokesman
in Tokyo for Apple, didn’t immediately return a telephone call seeking comment.
The iPad-maker’s first store in Tokyo in almost a decade is under construction
as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe unveils the third prong of his strategy to boost
economic growth that has already included fiscal stimulus and monetary policy.
“For Apple, the Japanese market
is appealing in terms of quantity and price,” said Satoru Kikuchi, an analyst
at SMBC Nikko Securities Inc. “There is a room to expand tablet sales and a
possibility the Japanese market expands if Apple’s mobile carrier partners
increase.”
NTT DoCoMo, Japan’s largest wireless
carrier, would consider carrying the iPhone if it can limit the handset’s share of sales to less than 30
percent of the company’s total, Chief Financial Officer Kazuto Tsubouchi said
Aug. 8. The Japanese carrier’s online store, called market, offers music,
videos and games and competes with Apple’s iTunes store.
Prime Minister Abe has promised
to loosen business regulations and increase government support to help the
country’s industry as part of the “third arrow” plan, following fiscal and
monetary stimulus. Consumer prices rose in June, and the world’s third-biggest
economy expanded at an annualized 2.6 percent in the three months through June
30.
The land costs about $164 million
and a completed store with Apple as tenant would value the property at around
$254 million, said Seth Sulkin, a representative director at Tokyo real estate
and asset manager Pacifica Capital KK.
Sulkin was Apple’s real estate adviser for all seven of the company’s previous
stores in Japan.
“Apple wants the best real estate
they can get,” said Sulkin. “They are particular about size and shape. If they
have to wait to get the real estate, they would.”
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