Japan, Israel upgrade relations as Arab oil influence wanes

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[September 06, 2016]  By Tova Cohen

TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Japanese executives say they are increasingly drawn to investments in Israel as the price of oil falls and, with it, the influence Arab oil suppliers have on Japan's decision-making.

Over the past two years, Japan and Israel have strengthened business ties, signing a series of economic agreements on the back of a visit by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to Israel in 2015 and Benjamin Netanyahu's trip to Tokyo in 2014.

"Abe had a good impression; he liked Netanyahu's mentality," Yoshimitsu Kobayashi, chairman of Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings, told Reuters when he led a delegation from Keizai Doyukai, the Japanese business lobby, to Israel in May.

For years, trade between the two was minimal - Japan was reluctant to upset its oil suppliers, many of whom belong to the Arab League, which has long backed a boycott of Israel.

"Geopolitics is changing in the Middle East and as oil prices come down, strategically it's not as important," said Kobayashi. "Japan is changing its mind."

Israel's prowess in Internet, biotech, and automotive technologies is particularly attractive, Kobayashi said.

This is not to say Japan has given up on the Arab world.

Isamu Nakashima, chief researcher at the Middle East Institute of Japan, said Japan's need for oil will always trump its need for anything Israel can offer, though past worries that trade with Israel could annoy Arab nations have mostly faded.

"But for things to really improve a lot, there needs to be a peace settlement (between Israel and the Palestinians)," Nakashima said.

Bilateral trade in goods in the first seven months of 2016 rose to $1.4 billion from $1.1 billion, making Japan Israel's fourth-largest market in Asia. It is part of a growing shift in focus as Asia overtakes the United States to become Israel's largest trading partner after Europe.

BUILDING FROM A LOW BASE

The deal that put Israel on Japan's business map was the $900 million acquisition of chat app Viber by Japanese e-commerce giant Rakuten Inc in 2014. Viber has a big user base in Asia and was approached by Rakuten while doing business there, said Michael Shmilov, Viber's chief operating officer.

"There are strong cultural differences but at the same time, Rakuten is a global company where English is the official language and we are working closely to reduce the impact of these differences," he said.

The biggest obstacle, he said, is the lack of direct airline flights, something Israel wants to change.

The Viber acquisition was followed by several others, including the $212 million purchase of Israel's Altair Semiconductor by Sony Corp this year.

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Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (R) and his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu (L) visit an Israeli innovation exhibition in Jerusalem January 18, 2015. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun/File Photo

Net investment by Japanese firms in Israel, after subtracting Israeli investment in Japan, nearly doubled in 2015 to 5.2 billion yen ($50 million), according to the Japan External Trade Organisation, citing Bank of Japan data.

"The last two years ... we've seen a great expansion of Japanese activities, many large corporations are coming here, setting up R&D centres and investment flows are rising," said Avi Hasson, Israel's chief scientist.

Seven Japanese companies - including Panasonic, NEC and Ricoh - have joined his office's multinational R&D programme, creating 12 projects with Israeli companies.

Gilad Majerowicz, head of the Japan desk at Israeli law firm Herzog Fox & Neeman, said several large Japanese companies planned to set up R&D centres in Israel.

For Israel, Japan offers a large market and a source of capital at a time of growing calls by some activist groups in Europe and the United States for a boycott of Israel because of its policies towards the Palestinians.

They seek a state on land captured by Israel in a 1967 war. The most recent peace talks between the two fizzled in 2014.

Israeli mobile advertising analytics firm AppsFlyer opened an office in Tokyo last year and has over 100 Japanese clients.

"People who are tech savvy really respect Israeli companies," said Naoya Otsuba, AppsFlyer's manager in Japan.

An area where Japan is a particularly attractive market is in defense and cyber security, a sector that faces restrictions when it comes to China. Health is another key area as Japan's aging population seeks affordable medication.

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries has a joint venture with Takeda Pharmaceutical Co to bring its generics drugs to Japan.

(Additional reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto and Elaine Lies in Tokyo; editing by Mark Heinrich)

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