A telecom firm just decided that the best thing on its books was the dirt. So it sold the dirt and kept the building on top.
The $371 Million Land Sale
NTT Docomo is the mobile arm of Japan's biggest telecom group. It just sold land plots in central Tokyo worth about 59 billion yen.
That is roughly $371 million. The deal lands in the middle of one of Japan's hottest real estate cycles in decades.
Sumitomo Corp took the bigger piece. It paid around 50 billion yen for land around a building in the Hitotsubashi area of Chiyoda Ward. Japan Post Real Estate picked up the smaller plot - land under a building in Shinjuku - for about 9 billion yen.
Docomo keeps the buildings on top in both cases. That means the carrier is now renting the ground from the buyers going forward. The setup is a sale-and-leaseback in all but name.
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Why Telecoms Are Sitting On Land They Don't Need
The deal is part of a broader push across Japan. Firms are cashing out old real estate during one of the strongest land cycles in decades. Buyers are paying up for prime Tokyo plots.
Telecom giants like Docomo built or got dense webs of central Tokyo plots decades ago. They housed switches, gear, and back-office staff.
AI and the cloud have made much of that footprint less key to day-to-day work. Holding prime Tokyo dirt on a thin-margin telecom book is hard to defend.
Buyers like Sumitomo and Japan Post are willing to pay top yen for it. Docomo had been weighing land sales of more than $600 million since late 2025. This deal is the first chunk of that plan.
What To Watch
Watch whether other Japanese telecoms follow Docomo's lead. SoftBank, KDDI, and the broader NTT group all sit on the same kind of old plots. More carve-outs are likely if land prices stay this strong.
Buyers should also note who is on the buy side. Sumitomo and Japan Post are not flippers. They are long-term holders.
That signals trust that Tokyo land prices still have room to run.
For Docomo holders, the read is simpler. The carrier found cash in its own walls without selling a single SIM card.
The yen is also part of the story. A weak yen makes Tokyo land cheap for foreign buyers.
That has lured fresh money from Wall Street and the Gulf states. Blackstone bought Tokyo Garden Terrace Kioicho for $2.6 billion in late 2024 - the biggest foreign real estate deal in Japanese history at the time.
Docomo just sold to local buyers this time. Next time, the bidders may not all be Japanese. The trend is broader than one deal.
The other read here is what it means for telecom stocks. Old gear and old land tend to weigh on a balance sheet. A clean sale lifts the look of free cash flow.
Holders should watch for more of these in the next two quarters.
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