Chapter 229: CH : 221 The Art of Acquisition II
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*****
Marvin stood up abruptly from his chair and walked over to the drafting table. He picked up a thick piece of charcoal and began sketching rapidly—a character, half-formed, emerging from the white paper. It served as a deeply ingrained habit. The act of drawing helped his mind process complex data. The tactile translation of imagination into line and shadow cleared the mental clutter of high finance.
"The studio names we filed with the registry." Marvin kept his back to them, his hand moving fluidly. "Aniplex. A-1 Pictures. TRIGGER. MAPPA. Kinema Citrus and more. What is the current legal status?"
Gregg answered immediately. "All trademarks are successfully, legally registered across Japan, the US, and the EU. We established clean, corporate shell companies for each entity. There are no operations running yet, but the legal framework sits completely in place, waiting for assets."
"And the physical locations for the headquarters?"
"We are currently looking at three potential, high-end sites." Gregg pulled out a detailed, laminated map of Tokyo and spread it across the mahogany desk. "One building in Suginami—exactly where a huge cluster of legacy animation studios are currently located. One facility in Nerima. And one smaller site in Mitaka."
Gregg pointed to the red circles on the map. "The Suginami location offers the most expensive real estate, but it carries the most industry prestige. The Nerima location proves cheaper, but sits further away from the dense talent pool we need to hire from."
Marvin stopped drawing and turned his head to study the map from across the room. His eyes traced the winding streets, the major train lines, and the highlighted clusters of industry.
"Buy the Suginami property." Marvin ordered without hesitation. "I don’t care about the price tag. We want geographic placement in the beating heart of the industry. And we will publicly announce the founding of Aniplex at that address."
Marvin turned fully back to face his lieutenants. His dark silhouette outlined sharply against the drafting table, the charcoal pencil still gripped loosely in his hand.
"The ultimate point isn’t to micro-manage these studios right away." Marvin explained the long game. "The strategic point focuses on legally owning the names and the trademarks before anyone else in this timeline creates them. In ten years, TRIGGER and MAPPA will be household names—if we build their foundations right."
Amy frowned slightly, her mind catching the certainty in his tone. "You’re assuming the future of the industry is predictable."
"I am not assuming anything, Amy." Marvin’s voice remained soft, gentle, but vibrating with confidence. "I am making it predictable."
"Moving on to tech acquisitions." Amy visibly shook off the chill of his statement, flipping to the next section of the thick folder.
"**Crypton Future Media**. The deal is done. We successfully acquired a ninety-one percent controlling stake in the company for exactly ¥30.5 million. Approximately two hundred and twenty thousand USD."
Marvin nodded in deep satisfaction. "And the founder, Hiroyuki Ito?"
"He remains on board as the CEO." Amy confirmed. "He eagerly signed a fifteen-year employment contract. He seemed... relieved, actually. He struggled to keep the lights on in his office. The generic sound effects business simply wasn’t growing fast enough to cover his mounting personal debts."
"And he has no idea what kind of goldmine he’s sitting on." Marvin offered a smirk.
"No idea at all." Amy smiled back, sharing the secret. "He genuinely thinks we’re just interested in acquiring his sound library for our anime studios. He doesn’t know anything about the Yamaha connection you discovered."
Marvin set down his charcoal pencil. "Keep it exactly that way. We do not mention the word ’Vocaloid’ in his presence. We do not mention any virtual idol plans before the year 2003. As far as Ito is concerned, Crypton operates as a struggling sound effects company that happens to share a minor software relationship with Yamaha. We will formally introduce the Vocaloid concept to him only when the underlying software technology is actually ready for deployment."
"When exactly will that be?" Gregg asked, curious about the tech.
"Yamaha’s internal development timeline puts the first working, functional prototype around 2003 or 2004." Marvin calculated, his eyes glittering with the promise of future billions.
"Commercial, public release maybe 2005 or 2006. But... we can accelerate that timeline. We have limitless capital by then. We have a direct relationship with Yamaha now. And when Hatsune Miku officially launches and takes over the world, we will entirely own the company that owns her."
Gregg let out a low, impressed whistle. "That is a long play, Marvin."
"Some of the best, most lucrative plays are long ones, Gregg." Marvin returned to sit in his leather chair. "What is next on the butcher’s bill?"
"**Beeam Entertainment**." Amy pulled the next file. "We successfully acquired their entire distribution network for $2.1 million USD. That purchase immediately gives us unrestricted access to their retail channels, their physical warehouse facilities across the country, and their deep, legacy relationships with the major TV broadcasting stations."
"That seems relatively high for a struggling, mid-tier distributor." Gregg noted, examining the numbers.
"It is technically high." Amy admitted. "But we’re not just buying physical trucks and warehouses. We are buying *time*. Building a national distribution network completely from scratch in this country would take us five years and cost more in bribes and mistakes. This way, we possess immediate, turnkey national reach for the magazine launch."
Marvin considered this assessment, his fingers steepled thoughtfully beneath his chin. "Who exactly did we negotiate this buyout with?"
"A man named Nakamura." Amy replied. "He’s the founder, and he’s retiring. His children harbor no interest in taking over the family business. He seemed surprisingly happy to sell the entire operation to a foreign buyer because—"
Amy hesitated, biting her lip.
"Because what?" Marvin prompted, raising an eyebrow.
"Because he assumed that we’d fail completely within five years, go bankrupt, and he could easily buy back the physical assets for pennies on the dollar in his retirement."
Marvin threw his head back and laughed loudly. A rich, warm, genuinely amused sound filled the sterile room, making the fluorescent lights feel less oppressive.
"I actually really like Nakamura." Marvin chuckled, wiping a tear from his eye. "He’s a shark. Amy, send him a bottle of expensive, aged whiskey. A very good one. And include a handwritten note telling him I look forward to proving him wrong."
"Done." Amy smiled, making a note. "Next, we’ve formally approached NTV broadcasting about acquiring their thirty-three percent equity stake in **Towani Corporation**. Our opening offer stands at $800,000 cash."
"Towani represents the Warner/NTV/Toshiba animation joint venture, correct?" Marvin verified his memory.
"Yes. It officially launched this very month, actually. July 1998." Amy confirmed. "Their initial publicized capitalization was three hundred million yen—about $2.14 million. Warner Bros, NTV, and Toshiba each hold roughly a third of the voting shares."
"And they’re looking to sell a brand new venture?"
"They’re not looking." Amy corrected. "But NTV finds itself severely cash-strapped after the financial crisis hit their advertising revenue. They’ve been quietly laying off staff and slashing production budgets across the board. An $800,000 liquid cash infusion for a non-core, unproven asset might prove appealing to their board."
Marvin nodded slowly, visualizing the corporate structure. "We don’t need a controlling interest. We just need a secure seat at the table with the big boys. If we acquire NTV’s minority stake, we become a voting shareholder. That legally grants us full visibility into Warner’s massive production pipeline, and the first look at potential, lucrative co-productions."
"Exactly the strategy." Amy agreed.
"Make the aggressive offer." Marvin instructed. "But do not push them too hard. If they decline out of pride, we simply wait in the shadows. They will inevitably come crawling back to us when the recession bites deeper and they get truly desperate for cash." Marvin’s tone remained matter-of-fact, almost bored by the predictability of corporate greed. He had played this game of attrition countless times over.
Amy’s expression grew more serious, her posture stiffening. The light playfulness marking the earlier conversation completely drained away.
"This next one proves delicate." Amy warned, leaning over the desk. "**Youmex**. They are currently in the messy process of dissolution and liquidation by Toshiba EMI. They foolishly took on massive debt from Artmic—remember Artmic? The studio that produced *Bubblegum Crisis*?—and they simply couldn’t pay the loans back when the market crashed."
"How much debt are we talking about?" Marvin asked sharply.
"Approximately $1.2 million." Amy reported. "But the underlying assets—the production library, the state-of-the-art recording equipment, the IP contracts—hold more worth than that debt burden."
Marvin leaned forward, his eyes locked on her. "What’s the exact play here?"
"We acquire Youmex’s physical assets and legally assume their debt for exactly $400,000 cash upfront." Amy proposed, laying out the trap. "That grants us an immediate, turnkey animation production capability. And we simultaneously acquire **Futureland**—Youmex’s dedicated record label—for a mere $250,000. That purchase gives us a massive library of anime soundtracks, and exclusive voice actor contracts that we can seamlessly convert into our premium dubbing studio."
"And the $1.2 million debt?" Marvin asked, finding the hole.
"We restructure it." Amy smiled. "Toshiba EMI remains desperate to get that bad paper off their quarterly books to appease their shareholders. They will gladly take a massive haircut discount if we offer them clean cash today."
Marvin stayed quiet for a long moment, processing the multi-layered maneuver.
"We do it." Marvin commanded. "We immediately convert the failing record label into our state-of-the-art dubbing studio. Call the new entity Hibiki Studios. This gives us in-house capability for international distribution."
"What about the existing voice actors under contract?" Gregg asked.
"We honor their current contracts to the letter." Marvin spoke firmly. "And then we generously offer them new, better ones. We want to build a loyal, dedicated stable of talent—people loyal to Meyers Media Japan as a business, not just hired guns loyal to individual projects."
Marvin’s voice remained soft, but undeniable steel lay buried beneath it.
"The final, biggest piece of the puzzle." Amy pulled out a thick, heavy binder requiring both hands. "**Happinet**. They currently plan to go fully public with an IPO in December 1998. We successfully, quietly placed $5 million in escrow for a guaranteed eighteen percent stake before the offering."
"That is a significant position." Marvin noted, impressed.
"It is." Amy nodded proudly. "And we successfully negotiated a highly specific, separate corporate agreement: Happinet will assist us in establishing our own, in-house merchandising and licensing division and factories. They will provide experienced talent, recommend manufacturing equipment, and assist heavily with setting up our supply chain."
Gregg interjected, sounding a note of caution. "But Marvin, they are not giving us access to their proprietary software systems. We have to build our own logistical infrastructure entirely from scratch."
"That is perfectly fine." Marvin dismissed the concern with a wave of his hand. "I don’t want their outdated, clunky systems. I want their institutional knowledge and talents. Once we have our own efficient merchandising division up and running, we can scale it globally, independently of them. And when Happinet officially goes public in December, our eighteen percent pre-IPO stake becomes worth a hell of a lot more than our initial $5 million investment."
"You are betting an exorbitant amount of capital on the Japanese market rapidly recovering." Amy searched his face.
"I am not betting on the Japanese market recovering anytime soon." Marvin kept his voice quiet, yet it carried across the room like thunder. "I am betting entirely on *anime* recovering. The traditional Japanese economy might take a miserable decade to rebuild. But the sprawling, untapped international market—the US, Europe, Southeast Asia—hungers for high-quality content right now. And we will feed them."
Marvin stood from his chair and walked to the window. He pulled the wooden blind aside an inch, taking in the sprawling, chaotic Tokyo skyline.
The sweltering sun began its slow, colorful descent, casting long, dramatic shadows across the concrete city.
In the far distance, a towering yellow construction crane swung lazily against the bruised, orange sky, building something new atop the decaying ruins of the old world.
"We move faster than I originally calculated." Marvin spoke to his own reflection. "Three weeks ago, we held nothing but a business plan and a loan application. Now, we own four production studios—two acquired, two built from scratch. We own a national distribution network. We own a record label. We secured a sprawling merchandising partner. And we possess a sound technology company destined to revolutionize the entire global music industry in a decade."
Amy and Gregg exchanged a silent glance across the desk. They rarely witnessed Marvin in this state—contemplative, quiet, displaying a sliver of vulnerability.
*****
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