
Kyoto's Dusit, Banyan hotels mix in Southeast Asian touch to entice guests
TOKYO -- Southeast Asian luxury hotels in Japan are gaining popularity for combining foreign elements like Thai cuisine and local elements like geisha and hot springs, aiming to appeal to both inbound tourists wanting to experience Japan and native Japanese desiring a taste of greater Asia.
Dusit Thani Kyoto sits in a part of Kyoto's Shimogyo Ward where old streetscapes remain. In mid-April, Thai women in traditional costumes danced in the lobby for the Thai New Year water festival of Songkran.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Kyodo News
5 hours ago
- Kyodo News
Japan firms push for individual investment options for aircraft, cars
KYODO NEWS - 12 hours ago - 09:54 | All, Japan Some Japanese firms are looking to provide individuals with opportunities to invest in commercial vehicles such as aircraft and rental cars for island tourism, hoping such products will help investors to broaden their portfolios beyond traditional stockholdings. In what it calls Japan's first publicly offered aircraft investment product tailored for individual investors, FPG Securities Co. will start soliciting funds for an Airbus A320-200 from late June, with the minimum investment amount set at 1 million yen ($7,000) per unit. The small-lot product will make it accessible for individuals to "own" aircraft, which can cost more than 10 billion yen when brand new and are usually targets for investment by major trading houses and institutional investors. As the Airbus aircraft will be leased to Spain's flagship airline Iberia, investors will be paid annual dividends from the leasing revenues and may also earn returns from the capital gain on its eventual sale. With the investment term set for two years and 10 months, the company is projecting a first-year return rate of around 6 percent. The product carries the risk of falling below its initial value at redemption, such as in the case of a decline in air travel demand due to conflicts and pandemics. Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking Corp., meanwhile, is preparing to launch an investment product for retail investors in collaboration with a rental car business affiliated with Idom Inc., operator of used-car chain Gulliver. A total of 200 cars purchased by the financial institution in the southern island prefecture of Okinawa in March are to be packaged as a small-lot investment product within the next few years. While investors can gain from returns from the rental company's profits, the rental firm will not have to borrow funds from banks. "We hope investors will see this as a way to secure means of transportation at a tourist site and help address challenges such as overtourism," a Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking official said. Related coverage: Gold investments booming in Japan as U.S. tariffs stir economic fears Japan gov't official vows to work to defend global financial markets Japan mulls creating new tax-free investment program for seniors


Nikkei Asia
10 hours ago
- Nikkei Asia
Kyoto's Dusit, Banyan hotels mix in Southeast Asian touch to entice guests
TOKYO -- Southeast Asian luxury hotels in Japan are gaining popularity for combining foreign elements like Thai cuisine and local elements like geisha and hot springs, aiming to appeal to both inbound tourists wanting to experience Japan and native Japanese desiring a taste of greater Asia. Dusit Thani Kyoto sits in a part of Kyoto's Shimogyo Ward where old streetscapes remain. In mid-April, Thai women in traditional costumes danced in the lobby for the Thai New Year water festival of Songkran.


The Mainichi
17 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Japan firms push for individual investment options for aircraft, cars
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Some Japanese firms are looking to provide individuals with opportunities to invest in commercial vehicles such as aircraft and rental cars for island tourism, hoping such products will help investors to broaden their portfolios beyond traditional stockholdings. In what it calls Japan's first publicly offered aircraft investment product tailored for individual investors, FPG Securities Co. will start soliciting funds for an Airbus A320-200 from late June, with the minimum investment amount set at 1 million yen ($7,000) per unit. The small-lot product will make it accessible for individuals to "own" aircraft, which can cost more than 10 billion yen when brand new and are usually targets for investment by major trading houses and institutional investors. As the Airbus aircraft will be leased to Spain's flagship airline Iberia, investors will be paid annual dividends from the leasing revenues and may also earn returns from the capital gain on its eventual sale. With the investment term set for two years and 10 months, the company is projecting a first-year return rate of around 6 percent. The product carries the risk of falling below its initial value at redemption, such as in the case of a decline in air travel demand due to conflicts and pandemics. Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking Corp., meanwhile, is preparing to launch an investment product for retail investors in collaboration with a rental car business affiliated with Idom Inc., operator of used-car chain Gulliver. A total of 200 cars purchased by the financial institution in the southern island prefecture of Okinawa in March are to be packaged as a small-lot investment product within the next few years. While investors can gain from returns from the rental company's profits, the rental firm will not have to borrow funds from banks. "We hope investors will see this as a way to secure means of transportation at a tourist site and help address challenges such as overtourism," a Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking official said.