Out of Print: Investors Cheer Ricoh’s Pandemic-Inspired Move Away From Paper

Mar 3, 2021

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(Bloomberg) -- Print is dead? Japan’s Ricoh Co., best known as a maker of copiers, printers, faxes and other office mainstays, has joined those saying so.

With the pandemic upending workplace practices around the world, the office-equipment giant on Wednesday unveiled an ambitious shift away from paper and into the digital realm, aiming to transform into a digital-services provider.

Investors cheered the move, piling into Ricoh shares on Thursday. With bids vastly outweighing offers to sell, the stock was bid at its upper limit at noon in Tokyo, set to surge 16% even as shares in Tokyo dropped.

The coronavirus outbreak has forced companies worldwide to upend long-held practices — downsizing offices, eschewing business travel and turning to video conferencing as more staff work from home. In Japan, the pandemic has helped propel a long-overdue shift to the digital space, with the administration of Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga promoting a move away from faxes, company seals and other vestiges of physical offices.

In its five-year plan, Ricoh said it would seek to become a “digital services company,” acknowledging the damage the pandemic has done to its mainstay printing business. It pledged a 300 billion yen ($2.8 billion) war chest for acquisitions, promising “aggressive investment and M&A” in Europe. The firm aims to get the majority of operating profit from digital services by fiscal 2025, seizing on opportunities to help other workplaces shift online.

New Direction

“The firm appears determined to overhaul its portfolio to become a digital services company,” SMBC Nikko Securities analysts including Ryosuke Katsura wrote in a note, hailing the move as positive. “Ricoh’s new vision is clear.”

The company will also spend as much as 100 billion yen on a share buyback program over the next year, and plans to retire all its treasury stock once the repurchase is complete.

Founded in 1936, Ricoh was one of the Japanese giants of traditional office equipment, alongside the likes of Konica Minolta Inc. and Canon Inc. At one time, it was also a major maker of digital cameras, and acquired the Pentax brand in 2011.

But changing times have been unkind to Ricoh, even before the pandemic. Despite a booming stock market, its shares are down about 11% in the last decade, while the Nikkei 225 Stock Average, of which Ricoh is a member, has surged more than 170% in that period.

The move could turn out to be another win for Singapore-based activist hedge fund Effissimo Capital Management Pte, set up by former colleagues of Japanese activist investor Yoshiaki Murakami. It invested in Ricoh in 2015 and has gradually added to its stake. The secretive fund now holds 19% of Ricoh stock, having said in 2019 it could make proposals and give advice to management.

(Updates throughout.)

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