Zürcher Nachrichten - Tokyo Metro: Asia's oldest subway goes public

EUR -
AED 3.968286
AFN 71.916767
ALL 98.807536
AMD 419.429132
ANG 1.953133
AOA 985.323015
ARS 1062.841097
AUD 1.615282
AWG 1.944716
AZN 1.836572
BAM 1.957354
BBD 2.188137
BDT 129.502821
BGN 1.957189
BHD 0.407301
BIF 3146.698381
BMD 1.080398
BND 1.425832
BOB 7.489015
BRL 6.148432
BSD 1.08375
BTN 91.114499
BWP 14.468354
BYN 3.546255
BYR 21175.796928
BZD 2.184434
CAD 1.492802
CDF 3079.133648
CHF 0.936343
CLF 0.03716
CLP 1025.351487
CNY 7.702909
CNH 7.691671
COP 4606.848642
CRC 558.443387
CUC 1.080398
CUP 28.630542
CVE 110.351594
CZK 25.224697
DJF 192.983223
DKK 7.457771
DOP 65.2418
DZD 144.025374
EGP 52.621959
ERN 16.205967
ETB 130.514717
FJD 2.414363
FKP 0.826687
GBP 0.831674
GEL 2.959854
GGP 0.826687
GHS 17.398814
GIP 0.826687
GMD 75.628155
GNF 9348.508956
GTQ 8.380576
GYD 226.733167
HKD 8.396603
HNL 26.999187
HRK 7.442893
HTG 142.672617
HUF 400.175052
IDR 16856.420534
ILS 4.071436
IMP 0.826687
INR 90.844655
IQD 1419.740371
IRR 45476.639384
ISK 149.299978
JEP 0.826687
JMD 171.995763
JOD 0.765987
JPY 164.003847
KES 139.788856
KGS 92.368457
KHR 4402.495445
KMF 492.499469
KPW 972.357779
KRW 1492.542512
KWD 0.331174
KYD 0.903117
KZT 525.787459
LAK 23807.902739
LBP 97037.464942
LKR 317.802325
LRD 208.613702
LSL 19.05802
LTL 3.190134
LVL 0.653522
LYD 5.212138
MAD 10.725715
MDL 19.452535
MGA 4973.903088
MKD 61.571321
MMK 3509.089919
MNT 3671.191763
MOP 8.67807
MRU 43.099219
MUR 49.774176
MVR 16.58391
MWK 1879.174613
MXN 21.560473
MYR 4.685148
MZN 69.030974
NAD 19.057931
NGN 1778.097369
NIO 39.881665
NOK 11.793374
NPR 145.784749
NZD 1.78526
OMR 0.415907
PAB 1.083771
PEN 4.08134
PGK 4.333441
PHP 62.548591
PKR 300.947057
PLN 4.323506
PYG 8574.808133
QAR 3.951201
RON 4.973497
RSD 117.051304
RUB 103.449108
RWF 1463.348309
SAR 4.057488
SBD 8.951715
SCR 14.715434
SDG 649.864687
SEK 11.386572
SGD 1.422554
SHP 0.826687
SLE 24.524348
SLL 22655.398263
SOS 619.388909
SRD 35.681753
STD 22362.053197
SVC 9.482529
SYP 2714.53218
SZL 19.052951
THB 36.297019
TJS 11.509031
TMT 3.792196
TND 3.359636
TOP 2.530397
TRY 37.015403
TTD 7.362846
TWD 34.648529
TZS 2944.08416
UAH 44.788746
UGX 3972.153767
USD 1.080398
UYU 45.045765
UZS 13877.14647
VEF 3913797.797538
VES 42.430968
VND 27425.898216
VUV 128.26703
WST 3.026393
XAF 656.472142
XAG 0.032029
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.919829
XDR 0.813038
XOF 656.472142
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.533932
ZAR 18.948123
ZMK 9724.879441
ZMW 28.799866
ZWL 347.887652
  • SCS

    -0.0800

    12.81

    -0.62%

  • RBGPF

    1.5000

    62

    +2.42%

  • RELX

    -0.6100

    47.02

    -1.3%

  • NGG

    -0.7400

    66.29

    -1.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0850

    24.735

    +0.34%

  • RIO

    0.5300

    65.48

    +0.81%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    24.93

    +0.24%

  • GSK

    -0.1600

    38

    -0.42%

  • BP

    0.1100

    31.58

    +0.35%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.07

    -0.61%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    33.32

    -0.21%

  • BTI

    0.6400

    34.89

    +1.83%

  • BCC

    -4.2500

    133.65

    -3.18%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0400

    7.36

    -0.54%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    77.32

    -0.16%

  • VOD

    -0.0800

    9.55

    -0.84%

Tokyo Metro: Asia's oldest subway goes public
Tokyo Metro: Asia's oldest subway goes public / Photo: Behrouz MEHRI - AFP

Tokyo Metro: Asia's oldest subway goes public

Every day six and a half million people ride Tokyo Metro's nine lines, part of a dizzyingly complex transport network serving the Japanese megacity and its sprawling suburbs.

Text size:

Tokyo Metro shares rocketed more than 40 percent on their stock market debut Wednesday, raising $2.3 billion in Japan's biggest initial public offering (IPO) in six years.

Here are some facts about the company and its listing:

- Asia's first subway -

London built the first public underground railway, but in 1927 Tokyo became the first Asian city with a subway thanks to a 2.2-kilometre (1.4-mile) track from Ueno to Asakusa.

The trains ran every three minutes on what is now part of Tokyo Metro's modern-day Ginza Line but were crowded with passengers who previously overran the city's trams.

Having slowed during and after World War II, construction of public transport picked up pace as Japan rebuilt itself into a major economic power.

The company Tokyo Metro was incorporated in 2004, adopting its heart-shaped "M" logo in place of the network's previous one: a spiky, space-age "S" for subway.

- Complex map -

Tokyo Metro's nine lines -- named Ginza, Marunouchi, Hibiya, Tozai, Chiyoda, Yurakucho, Hanzomon, Namboku and Fukutoshin -- stretch for a total of 195 kilometres.

The spotless and punctual air-conditioned trains form only one part of a vast underground and overground rail system serving Greater Tokyo, often cited as the world's biggest urban area.

All but two of the nine Tokyo Metro routes connect to other train lines, allowing direct access to the capital for commuters in farther flung areas.

Four other subway lines are run separately by the Tokyo government, alongside private services and East Japan Railway's overground routes like the Yamanote Line, whose green trains carry millions in a loop around the city.

Unique jingles are played at each Tokyo Metro station when a train is at the platform.

For example, at Ginza Station, the Marunouchi line's tunes are called "Tomorrow's Door" and "The March of a Little Bird".

- IPO -

The IPO is Japan's largest since 2018 when tech and telecoms conglomerate SoftBank Group raised a national record of $23.5 billion by listing its mobile unit.

On Wednesday morning, Tokyo Metro shares traded at 1,745 yen, up 45 percent from their issue price of 1,200 yen, with reports saying the issue was 15 times oversubscribed among investors.

Before the IPO, the national government owned just over half of Tokyo Metro shares and the Tokyo city government owned the rest. The listing reduces total state ownership to around 50 percent.

The funds raised will be used to repay bonds issued to finance the reconstruction of northeastern Japan after the 2011 earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster that killed 18,000 people.

- Free tickets -

Tokyo Metro says investors who buy 200 shares or more will receive some free tickets to its museum and golf range, as well as free tempura toppings at its noodle stands.

The "low volatility" of a firm like Tokyo Metro makes their shares a safe investment prospect for Japanese households, said Hideaki Miyajima, a professor of commerce at Waseda University.

"And for institutional investors, the Japanese market is very favourable given the very low exchange rate" of the yen and recent corporate governance reforms, he told AFP.

- Going underground -

In earthquake-prone Japan, Tokyo Metro trains are set up to stop just before a powerful jolt hits, using real-time seismic data from monitoring stations.

Climate change is also bringing more frequent and intense flooding to the capital, with some Tokyo subway stations inundated in August by torrential rain.

Also buried beneath the Greater Tokyo area is the world's largest flood tank, a cavernous subterranean reservoir built to protect the metropolis from storms and typhoons.

E.Schneyder--NZN