Livedoor

livedoor Co.,Ltd. (株式会社ライブドア, Kabushiki-gaisha Raibudoa) was a Japanese company that functioned as an Internet service provider and operator of a web portal and blog platform before being brought down by scandal in 2006. The company was founded and led in its first 10 years by Takafumi Horie, known as "Horiemon" in Japan. Livedoor grew into one of Japan's premier Internet businesses, putting over 1,000 employees on its payroll at its peak. Its reliance on acquisitions and stock swap mergers to achieve growth also made it one of the country's most controversial enterprises. Its growth came to a resounding halt when scandal erupted in early 2006. An investigation of securities law violations led to a nosedive in the company's stock price. The Tokyo Stock Exchange delisted Livedoor on April 14, 2006.[1] The floundering company's properties were purchased by South Korea-based NHN Corp in 2010.[2][3]

Livedoor
Native name
株式会社ライブドア
Formerly
Edge Co.
Kabushiki gaisha
IndustryInternet service
FounderTakafumi Horie
HeadquartersNishi-Shinjuku,
Tokyo
,
Japan
Websitewww.livedoor.com 

Today the ISP and blog services that bear the Livedoor name are operated by Line Corporation, developers of Line messaging services and the Naver Japan search portal. Line Corporation, based in Japan, was spun off from NHN Japan, an arm of its Korean parent, in February 2013.[3]

History

Origins and growth

Livedoor began in 1995 as Livin' on the Edge, a startup company run by Horie and a group of college friends[4] and was officially founded as Livin' On the EDGE Inc. in April 1996, in Minato, Tokyo.[5] In 1997, it was renamed Livin' On the EDGE Co., Ltd. Though initially a limited company (yugen kaisha), Livin' On the Edge was reorganized into a joint-stock company (kabushiki kaisha) in July 1997 and within only 3 years, went public on the Tokyo Stock Exchange's Mothers market in April 2000. In November 2002, Livin' on the Edge acquired the free Internet services business of Livedoor Corp., which had gone bankrupt. Livin' On the Edge changed its name to Edge Co., Ltd. in April 2003,[6] then adopted the name of the ISP business it had acquired from Livedoor Corp., by renaming itself livedoor Co. Ltd. (Livedoor), in February 2004.[7] This was followed by a 1:100 stock split.

In March 2004, during the 2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Livedoor moved to acquire the Kintetsu Buffaloes, a Japanese baseball team, but later withdrew its offer and, in September 2004, founded its own team (named livedoor baseball) and applied for admittance to Japan's professional baseball organization. The team's home ground was to be in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, but livedoor lost the competition to be the city's home team to Rakuten, a Japanese e-commerce company.

Livedoor acquisitions in the U.S. included MailCreations in Miami, Florida, in June 2004, which functioned as the company's U.S. headquarters. Livedoor entered search and contextual advertising spaces in America in November 2005.

A scandal involving securities law violations led the Tokyo Stock Exchange to delist Livedoor on April 14, 2006.[8][9]

Allegations

The case broke on January 16, 2006, when Tokyo prosecutors raided several Livedoor locations, Horie's home, and the homes of other Livedoor and subsidiary executives on suspicions of securities fraud. The raids spooked investors and sent shares plunging on January 17 and 18 as a widening criminal investigation sparked panic selling on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. Some brokers announced they would no longer allow use of the issue for margin trading. Volume was so heavy that it threatened to overload the TSE's computer system, prompting a halt in trading for the entire market—a breaking record and the first time this has ever occurred. The TSE ordered Livedoor to provide a formal response to the allegations. When the company filed a hasty report after a quick internal investigation, the TSE told executives to provide a more detailed report and threatened to delist Livedoor if allegations of improper activities proved valid.

On January 18, 2006, Hideaki Noguchi, an executive of H.S. Securities, a firm raided by prosecutors earlier in the week in connection with Livedoor, was found dead in an Okinawa hotel room in what the authorities labeled a suicide.[10]

The authorities called in several Livedoor and subsidiary executives for questioning over several days, and Horie himself on January 23. After several hours of questioning Horie, investigators felt they had learned enough to press charges and petitioned for four arrest warrants, which were granted. Horie, Livedoor's chief financial officer, and the presidents of two subsidiaries were arrested mid-evening for securities and accounting fraud.[11] They were held for two months without bail, and during this time, Livedoor's temporary Representative Director Fumito Kumagai was also arrested.[12]

Japan's Securities Commission filed a criminal complaint against the five arrested ex-executives of the company on March 13, 2006. Founder Horie was sentenced to 2.5 years in jail on March 16, 2007. Others were given various jail sentences four days later but appealed.[13]

Aftermath

After losing 90% of its stock price in four months and strong evidence of securities fraud, Livedoor was delisted from the Tokyo Stock Exchange on April 14, 2006.[14]

Fuji Television sued the company for ¥35 billion in damages in March 2007;[15] 1,000 individual investors filed a class-action suit in May 2006, eventually rising to 3,340 asking for ¥23 billion, which resulted in a final ruling of ¥7.6 billion against Livedoor,[16] and other similar suits resulted at least one judgment of ¥4.9 billion.[17] Livedoor in turn sued its own executives, with founder Horie settling for ¥21 billion and six others settling for a total of ¥760 million.[18]

Information obtained during the investigation led to the arrest and conviction of fund manager Yoshiaki Murakami for using inside information to profit off of a stake Livedoor purchased in Nippon Broadcasting System in 2005.[19]

Horie published an autobiography during his appeals, Complete Resistance, in which he proclaims his innocence and states that he was being targeted only due to his infamy, not the actual nature or severity of any crimes.[20]

The veracity of the suspicions aside, many smelled conspiracy given the timing of the action. It was seen as a political move by defenders of the status quo to punish Horie for daring to challenge them, and to discredit him and the business practices he had come to represent, which Horie's opponents considered distasteful and "un-Japanese."[21]

In order to prevent a recurrence of the scandal, Japan passed a law similar to Sarbanes–Oxley, nicknamed J-SOX, on June 14, 2006.

Livedoor Holdings

In 2007, the company span off to create a new subsidiary that retained the name of "Livedoor" and most of its portal-related businesses and itself became a pure holding company named "Livedoor Holdings" that oversaw the legal and financial management of its subsidiaries (reportedly 44 subsidiaries as of the end of 2005[22]) including the new Livedoor. In 2008, Livedoor Holdings changed its name to "LDH Corporation."[23]

Sale

During the upheaval in 2006 and 2007 rumors spread that Livedoor was preparing a $2 billion initial public offering in 2008. Several technology companies expressed interest in participating but the IPO never materialized. Livedoor instead put itself up for sale. In early 2010 South Korea-based NHN Corporation bought Livedoor for a reported ¥6.3 billion.[2]

Products and services bearing the Livedoor name today are owned and operated by Line Corporation, a Japan-based Internet company spun off from NHN Japan in February 2013.[3][24]

Liquidation

After completing the sale of Livedoor and other subsidiaries and paying dividends to its shareholders, LDH Corporation entered into voluntary liquidation by the shareholders' resolution in August 2011 and completed liquidation in December 2012 after distributing residual assets to its shareholders.

Offices

The headquarters of the original Livedoor company were located in the Sumitomo Fudosan Nishishinjuku Building (住友不動産西新宿ビル, Sumitomo Fudōsan Nishi-Shinjuku Biru) in Nishi-Shinjuku, Shinjuku, Tokyo.[25] Additional corporate offices were located on the 38th floor of the Roppongi Hills Mori Tower at 10-1, Roppongi 6-chome, Minato, Tokyo, 106-6138, Japan.

gollark: I think you could do it more neatly with a JSON-based syntax like this:```json["html", [ ["body", [ ["h1", "Some header"], ["p", [["em", "A thing"], " some text or whatever"]], ["a", { href: "https://internet" }, "click this very safe link"] ]]]]```
gollark: Ugh, I know. Even the actual HTML standard is irritating.
gollark: I see.
gollark: How well does your parser handle stuff like `<br>`?
gollark: To be honest Perl regexes probably can parse HTML, but they are also probably TC.

See also

References

  1. "Livedoor share trading ends ahead of delisting by TSE". Asahi Shimbun. 12 April 2006. Archived from the original on 22 April 2006. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  2. "S.Korea's NHN buys Japanese Internet provider Livedoor". London: The Independent. 2010-04-13. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  3. Matt Brian (6 February 2013). "NHN Japan Spins Off LINE, Targets International Expansion". The Next Web. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  4. "livedoor". Archived from the original on 23 February 2007. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  5. "livedoor". Archived from the original on 23 February 2007. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  6. "livedoor". Archived from the original on 27 November 2006. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  7. "livedoor". Archived from the original on 23 October 2006. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  8. Archived April 22, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  9. https://archive.is/20070815123802/http://www.asahi.com/english/Herald-asahi/TKY200604130233.html. Archived from the original on August 15, 2007. Retrieved April 14, 2006. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  10. "Figure in scandal kills himself as prosecutors start questioning officials". Asahi Shimbun. 20 January 2006. Archived from the original on 26 April 2006. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  11. "Livedoor chief Horie, three executives arrested". Financial Times. 2006. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  12. "Livedoor's new boss arrested". The Japan Times. 2006. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  13. "Livedoor accountant first to do real time for fraud". The Japan Times. 2007. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  14. "Livedoor stockholders to sue for compensation". The Japan Times. 2006. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  15. "Fuji TV files suit against Livedoor". The Japan Times. 2007. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  16. "Shareholders win suit for Livedoor damages". The Japan Times. 2009. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  17. "Livedoor to pay shareholders ¥4.9 billion". The Japan Times. 2009. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  18. "Livedoor damages lawsuit settled". The Japan Times. 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  19. "Murakami given two-year sentence". The Japan Times. 2007. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  20. "Horie says he, Okubo both were railroaded". The Japan Times. 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  21. Nakamoto, Michiyo; Pilling, David (January 16, 2006). "Japanese lawmen head for the Hills". Financial Times.
  22. "UCLA Center for Near Eastern Studies :: JAPAN: Livedoor may sell stake to investors to raise capital". 128.97.165.17. Archived from the original on 9 December 2014. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  23. "LDH Corporation: Private Company Information - Businessweek". Businessweek.com. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  24. "【LINE】商号変更に関するお知らせ/Information regarding Changes to Company Name". LINE Corporation. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  25. "会社概要 - 会社案内 - 株式会社ライブドア Archived 2011-12-04 at the Wayback Machine." Livedoor. Retrieved on December 14, 2011. "〒160-0023 東京都新宿区西新宿7-20-1 住友不動産西新宿ビル24F,25F(総合受付:24F)" - Map
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