As companies embrace selective return-to-office policies, prime central locations in Marunouchi and Shibuya are experiencing unexpected rental demand—and early movers are already locking in gains.
As independent ramen vendors expand across Shinjuku and Shibuya, residents and diners need to understand how this shift is reshaping local economics and food culture.
As visitor numbers surge past pre-pandemic levels, a new breed of hospitality entrepreneurs and established players are reshaping how the capital welcomes the world.
Rising inflation, currency volatility, and geopolitical uncertainty are testing the resilience of Japan's financial hub as investors reassess risk appetites.
As global instability threatens shipping routes and trade partnerships, Tokyo's manufacturers and traders face mounting pressure to rethink decades-old business models.
As foreign talent competes with automation, Tokyo's employment landscape is entering a critical transition phase that will reshape hiring strategies across the capital.
As delivery-only restaurants proliferate across Shibuya and Shinjuku, traditional hospitality venues compete fiercely for staff in a fundamentally altered labour market.
As foreign capital floods into Minato and beyond, understanding the indicators driving Tokyo's property and tech sectors reveals where the smart money is actually heading.
Middle East uncertainty and trade volatility are forcing Tokyo employers to reassess recruitment strategies, with tech and logistics sectors hit hardest.
From Shibuya to Shinjuku, entrepreneurs report their toughest year yet as inflation, labour shortages and shifting consumer behaviour squeeze margins across the capital.
Rising protectionism, geopolitical tensions, and supply chain fragmentation are creating unprecedented challenges for the trading companies and logistics firms that power Tokyo's economy.
As investment flows surge into the capital's entrepreneurial districts, local business owners learn to decode the signals reshaping their market landscape.
With tensions escalating across the Middle East and South Asia, Japanese logistics companies and trading houses are capturing billions in new business from multinationals desperate to reroute operations through safer corridors.
As tech talent floods to competing metros and wage demands climb, Tokyo employers face a recalibration of recruitment strategies that could reshape hiring across Japan's economic heartland.