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Last updated: 23 May 2026
Foreign fund managers looking to raise capital from Japanese investors face a pivotal regulatory question: can they rely on the Article 63 exemption under Japan’s Financial Instruments and Exchange Act (FIEA), or must they register as a Type I or Type II Financial Instruments Business Operator (FIBO)? With the JFSA’s “Japan Weeks 2026” initiative and ongoing FY2026 reforms to the Limited Partnership Act and cross-border tax treatment, inbound fundraising interest has intensified, and so has regulatory scrutiny. This practical guide explains what is the Article 63 exemption in Japan, walks through the Qualified Institutional Investor (QII) test, maps the Local Finance Bureau (LFB) notification process field by field, and provides an evidentiary checklist for reverse solicitation.
The Article 63 exemption allows a fund operator to solicit and manage investments for Qualified Institutional Investors (QIIs) and a limited number of other investors without registering as a Type I or Type II FIBO. Instead, the operator files a notification with the competent Local Finance Bureau. The exemption is codified in FIEA Article 63 and detailed in the FSA’s Market Entry Guidebook.
Article 63 of the FIEA creates a “Specially Permitted Business for Qualified Institutional Investors” (特例業務). It permits two specific activities, self-offering (distributing interests in a partnership-type fund) and self-management (managing the fund’s assets), provided at least one QII participates and any remaining investors fall within prescribed categories. The provision is designed to lower barriers for professional-grade funds while preserving investor protection for the retail public.
The FSA’s Market Entry Guidebook positions Article 63 as the least burdensome route into the Japanese market for foreign fund managers. Rather than completing the full FIBO registration process, which requires minimum capital, compliance officers and ongoing reporting, the manager files a concise notification and begins operations, subject to conduct-of-business rules the JFSA can enforce.
Eligible notifiers include general partners (GPs) of limited partnerships formed under the Limited Partnership Act for Investment (LPS Act), foreign limited partnerships that are substantively equivalent, and any person who both offers and manages collective investment scheme interests. The key constraint is the investor composition: the fund must include at least one QII investor, and non-QII investors must belong to categories specified in the FIEA’s Cabinet Office Ordinance, typically high-net-worth individuals meeting certain asset or income thresholds, listed companies, or other institutional entities. The article 63 exemption in Japan does not extend to open-ended retail investment trusts or publicly solicited funds.
Determining whether Article 63 covers your fund-raising activity involves three sequential tests. If any test fails, the manager must consider FIBO registration or an alternative exemption.
Scenario A, GP contacts a Tokyo-based high-net-worth individual. A Singapore-based GP emails a wealthy individual in Tokyo offering LP interests in a Cayman fund structured as a limited partnership. The GP has already secured a commitment from a Japanese bank (a QII). Provided the Tokyo individual meets the Definition Ordinance criteria for permitted non-QII investors, the GP can rely on Article 63 by filing the LFB notification before commencing solicitation in Japan.
Scenario B, Fund manager sends a global marketing email targeting Japanese investors. A London hedge fund manager distributes a newsletter to its global database, including recipients in Japan, describing a new fund. This likely constitutes solicitation directed at persons in Japan. If any of those Japanese recipients are not QIIs or permitted investors, the manager risks conducting unregistered securities business. Industry observers expect the JFSA to treat broadly targeted electronic marketing as active solicitation rather than passive information sharing.
Scenario C, Inbound approach from a Japanese pension fund. A Japanese corporate pension fund independently contacts a New York GP after reading a press article and requests fund documentation. Because the GP did not initiate the contact, reverse solicitation arguments may apply. However, the GP should still document the inbound origin meticulously, timestamps, the absence of prior targeted outreach, and the investor’s self-initiated request, before relying on this defence.
The definition of a Qualified Institutional Investor in Japan is set out in FIEA Article 2(3)(i) and elaborated in the Definition Ordinance on Financial Instruments Business (Cabinet Office Ordinance). Understanding who qualifies, and who does not, is critical to structuring a compliant offering under the article 63 exemption.
| QII Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Banks and deposit-taking institutions | MUFG Bank, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation |
| Insurance companies | Nippon Life, Tokio Marine |
| Registered FIBOs (Type I and Type II) | Registered securities firms, investment management companies |
| Investment corporations / trust banks | Licensed J-REITs, trust and custody banks |
| Pension funds (meeting asset threshold) | Corporate pension funds with assets above the prescribed amount |
| Government-affiliated financial institutions | Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC), DBJ |
| Foreign institutions with equivalent status | Offshore banks, insurers and registered investment advisers meeting the Ordinance’s equivalency test |
Entities not on this list, even sophisticated corporates or ultra-high-net-worth individuals, are not QIIs. They may, however, qualify as “permitted non-QII investors” under a separate set of criteria in the same Ordinance (net assets of at least JPY 100 million, or securities holdings exceeding JPY 100 million, among other conditions).
Where a fund relies on the private placement exemption alongside Article 63, the offering must stay within prescribed numeric limits. Under the FIEA’s small-number private placement regime, the number of offerees (not subscribers) may not exceed 49 within any six-month rolling period. In practice, this is frequently referred to alongside a “no more than 499 holders” ongoing test for certain fund types. These thresholds interact with the QII composition requirement: QIIs themselves are excluded from the 49-offeree count, but non-QII permitted investors are included.
Consider a foreign GP raising USD 200 million for a new growth-equity fund. The GP targets the following Japanese investors:
The fund satisfies the “at least one QII” test with six QIIs. The 8 non-QII individuals must each qualify under the Definition Ordinance’s permitted investor criteria, and they count toward the 49-offeree limit. Because 8 is well below 49, the private placement requirements for Japan are met. The GP files an Article 63 notification with the Local Finance Bureau and proceeds without FIBO registration.
Had the GP approached 50 or more non-QII individuals in a rolling six-month window, the small-number exemption would fail and the activity would require Type II FIBO registration.
Filing the Local Finance Bureau notification is the administrative gateway to operating under Article 63. The process is straightforward in concept but demands precision in execution. The notification must be submitted to the competent LFB, typically the Kanto Local Finance Bureau for Tokyo-based activities, before the notifier commences any solicitation or management activity in Japan.
| Form Field | What to Enter | Guidance Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Name of notifier (届出者の氏名又は名称) | Legal name of the GP or fund manager entity | Must match the entity’s registration documents; include trade name if different |
| Address of notifier (住所又は所在地) | Registered address of the GP or manager | For foreign entities, provide both the overseas registered address and the Japanese contact address if available |
| Name of fund / partnership (ファンドの名称) | Official name of the limited partnership or collective investment scheme | Use the exact name as it appears in the partnership agreement |
| Type of business (業務の種別) | Select self-offering (自己募集), self-management (自己運用), or both | Most Article 63 notifications cover both activities |
| QII investor details (適格機関投資家に関する事項) | Name and category of each QII investor committed to the fund | At least one QII must be identified; attach commitment letters or equivalent evidence |
| Number and category of non-QII investors (適格機関投資家以外の出資者) | Count and investor category for each permitted non-QII investor | Confirm each meets the Definition Ordinance criteria before listing |
| Description of fund activities (業務の内容) | Brief description of the fund’s investment strategy, target assets, and geographic focus | Keep concise but specific enough to demonstrate the scope of self-management |
| Commencement date (業務開始予定日) | Planned date for commencing solicitation or management | Must not be before the notification filing date |
Not every fund-marketing activity fits within Article 63. When the exemption is unavailable, because the investor composition test fails, the fund structure is wrong, or the manager’s activities exceed self-offering and self-management, the FIEA requires registration as a Type I Financial Instruments Business Operator or a Type II Financial Instruments Business Operator. Understanding these triggers prevents costly enforcement action.
| Regulatory Path | Typical Activity / Entity | Key Obligations |
|---|---|---|
| Article 63 exemption (Specially Permitted Business) | Self-offering and self-management of partnership fund interests to QIIs and permitted non-QII investors | File LFB notification; comply with conduct-of-business rules; no minimum capital; no mandatory compliance officer |
| Type I FIBO registration | Soliciting the public to purchase securities (stocks, bonds, listed fund interests); dealing or brokering in securities | Full registration with JFSA; minimum capital of JPY 50 million (or JPY 10 million for certain categories); prospectus delivery and disclosure obligations; compliance officer and internal controls required |
| Type II FIBO registration | Distribution or management of collective investment scheme interests to non-QII investors; investment advisory with discretion over CIS assets | Registration with JFSA; minimum capital of JPY 10 million; suitability rules; periodic reporting; advertising restrictions; compliance systems |
Reverse solicitation provides a narrow but important carve-out: if a Japanese investor independently and without prior prompting approaches a foreign fund manager to request investment access, the manager’s subsequent provision of materials and acceptance of the subscription may not constitute “solicitation” under the FIEA. This means neither Article 63 notification nor FIBO registration would be triggered, but the evidentiary burden falls entirely on the manager.
For fund managers relying on the article 63 exemption in Japan, maintaining compliant marketing practices is as important as the initial notification filing. The following checklist consolidates the key operational controls:
| Date | Event | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 2006 | FIEA enacted, including Article 63 (Specially Permitted Business framework) | Created the notification-based exemption for funds marketed to QIIs, replacing fragmented prior rules |
| 2016 | Strengthened conduct-of-business rules and investor eligibility criteria for Article 63 notifiers | Narrowed the categories of permitted non-QII investors; imposed new reporting and record-keeping obligations on notifiers |
| 2021 | JFSA introduced new exemption framework for foreign fund managers | Created additional pathways for overseas managers to access Japanese capital without full FIBO registration, supplementing Article 63 |
| FY2026 | LPS Act amendments and cross-border tax reforms; JFSA “Japan Weeks 2026” initiative | Industry observers expect renewed inbound interest from foreign GPs; tax changes may affect LP-level withholding and carried interest treatment for foreign partnerships |
The article 63 exemption in Japan remains the most efficient pathway for foreign fund managers to access Japanese institutional capital without the cost and complexity of full FIBO registration. Success depends on three things: ensuring the fund’s investor composition satisfies the QII test and permitted-investor criteria, filing a complete and accurate LFB notification before any solicitation, and maintaining rigorous documentation of all marketing activities and investor interactions. Where the exemption does not fit, because the investor base is too broad, the fund structure is wrong, or activities extend beyond self-offering and self-management, Type I or Type II FIBO registration is unavoidable.
Given the pace of regulatory evolution in FY2026, fund managers entering or expanding in the Japanese market should engage specialist Japanese counsel to confirm their compliance position and monitor ongoing reforms.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ryuichi Nozaki at Atsumi & Sakai, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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