Kato Pleasure Group, which runs a chain of so-called love hotels across Japan, plans to spend ¥24 billion (US$204 million) doubling its number of properties to 100 and may sell shares to the public, its founder said.
Japan's love hotels -- which sell rooms by the hour and often allow guests to book and pay at a machine in their lobbies -- are popular in cities where rents average ¥2,500 (US$21) per square meter, forcing many young people and married couples to live with their parents.
If Kato Pleasure sells shares, it would be the first love hotel company to list in Japan, though the industry's image may make it difficult to lure investors.
"The image of a love hotel is dim and sleazy," said Tomoyasu Kato, who owns more than a 50 percent stake in the company. "For young people, a `love hotel' constitutes a necessity." Kato says he has approached investment banks to help fund his plan.
The three-year expansion would make it one of the top three love hotel chains, according to investment bank Westwood Capital (Asia) Ltd.
Kato also owns a business hotel in Fukuoka with the world's fourth-largest securities company Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc and is managing hot-spring resorts with Japan's local governments.
He hasn't attracted any high profile names to his love hotel business. Lehman spokeswoman Jackie Kestenbaum declined to comment.
"It's a shame business," said Tatsuo Koyama, chairman of Aine, a closely held company that owns 100 love hotels. "People think it's a vice business." It's not that the business isn't profitable.
Kato Pleasure -- which said its customers are usually aged between 20 and 27 -- expects profit before tax to rise two-thirds to ¥1.5 billion in the year ending March 31 as sales rise a fifth to ¥12 billion, Kato said.
"The love hotel business is a good one because of the high occupancy rates and minimal maintenance costs," said Gabriel Scion, managing director at Westwood Capital.
"They serve a market where housing is limited, and there is not much privacy in existing properties." Kato Pleasure is taking advantage of record low interest rates and a property slump that has driven commercial values in the world's second-largest economy down about 62 percent in 11 years.
At the Hotel Lala in Tokyo's Shibuya district, 31 of 38 rooms were occupied at 5pm on a recent Thursday.
Tomoyasu Kato, now 37, took over his ailing father's record- producing company, a clothes shop and three love hotels in 1987 when the family business was ¥2 billion in debt and had ¥300 million in annual sales.
Kato Pleasure now has 40 love hotels with 1,059 rooms, for which it charges an average of ¥6,800 (US$58) for three hours, or ¥7,800 for one night. It has more than 3 million guests at its hotels a year.
Many of the company's love hotels have themes including Christmas all year round and churches.
The company employs about 1,700 people including part time workers and has about 1,100 of them working in the love hotel business. Usually there is about one employee per love hotel room.
It costs about ¥15 million to acquire one hotel room and Kato Pleasure is planning to acquire or co-invest with landowners and investors ¥24 billion for 1,582 rooms.
Kato Pleasure's 4.5 million customers can apply for a "Pleasure One" card that enables the 200,000 members to get discounts on their hotel rooms and at the company's restaurants.
Kato offers his love hotel guests complimentary Christmas cakes on Dec. 25 and give them a chance to win a trip to Hawaii.
"The good thing about a love hotel is that you can just go at any time, use it cheaply and it's more exciting than a conventional city hotel," said Kato.
"If I go on business I stay at a love hotel. It's cheaper."
RUN IT BACK: A succesful first project working with hyperscalers to design chips encouraged MediaTek to start a second project, aiming to hit stride in 2028 MediaTek Inc (聯發科), the world’s biggest smartphone chip supplier, yesterday said it is engaging a second hyperscaler to help design artificial intelligence (AI) accelerators used in data centers following a similar project expected to generate revenue streams soon. The first AI accelerator project is to bring in US$1 billion revenue next year and several billion US dollars more in 2027, MediaTek chief executive officer Rick Tsai (蔡力行) told a virtual investor conference yesterday. The second AI accelerator project is expected to contribute to revenue beginning in 2028, Tsai said. MediaTek yesterday raised its revenue forecast for the global AI accelerator used
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) has secured three construction permits for its plan to build a state-of-the-art A14 wafer fab in Taichung, and is likely to start construction soon, the Central Taiwan Science Park Bureau said yesterday. Speaking with CNA, Wang Chun-chieh (王俊傑), deputy director general of the science park bureau, said the world’s largest contract chipmaker has received three construction permits — one to build a fab to roll out sophisticated chips, another to build a central utility plant to provide water and electricity for the facility and the other to build three office buildings. With the three permits, TSMC
The DBS Foundation yesterday announced the launch of two flagship programs, “Silver Motion” and “Happier Caregiver, Healthier Seniors,” in partnership with CCILU Ltd, Hondao Senior Citizens’ Welfare Foundation and the Garden of Hope Foundation to help Taiwan face the challenges of a rapidly aging population. The foundation said it would invest S$4.91 million (US$3.8 million) over three years to foster inclusion and resilience in an aging society. “Aging may bring challenges, but it also brings opportunities. With many Asian markets rapidly becoming super-aged, the DBS Foundation is working with a regional ecosystem of like-minded partners across the private, public and people sectors
BREAKTHROUGH TECH: Powertech expects its fan-out PLP system to become mainstream, saying it can offer three-times greater production throughput Chip packaging service provider Powertech Technology Inc (力成科技) plans to more than double its capital expenditures next year to more than NT$40 billion (US$1.31 billion) as demand for its new panel-level packaging (PLP) technology, primarily used in chips for artificial intelligence (AI) applications, has greatly exceeded what it can supply. A significant portion of the budget, about US$1 billion, would be earmarked for fan-out PLP technology, Powertech told investors yesterday. Its heavy investment in fan-out PLP technology over the past 10 years is expected to bear fruit in 2027 after the technology enters volume production, it said, adding that the tech would