Rakuten wesentlich besser als Rocket
Look Out Amazon, Here Comes...Rakuten?
Japanese e-commerce firm Rakuten announced on Tuesday it is acquiring Ebates for $1 billion.
The acquisition, which Rakuten hinted at last week, is part of the Japanese company’s push to grow its base beyond its domestic market and hopefully, become a global player. Having made some $1.2 billion acquisitions to date along these lines, this is Rakuten’s most ambitious move to date.
However, investors are dubious that the company can absorb yet another foreign acquisition, much less one the size of Ebates, despite Rakuten’s strong cash position.
Then there is the ever-present Amazon, which dominates the e-commerce market in the U.S. Few believe it will falter in the face of Chinese giant Alibaba, much less a Rakuten-Ebates combo.
Rakuten Goes Forth
Not surprisingly, Rakuten says it is undaunted. For starters, it has assembled a very interesting mix of acquisitions. There is messaging app Viber, which it purchased for $900 million in February, the Canadian ebook offering Kobo, Spanish video service Wuaki.tv, Viki, a digital content platform and Buy.com.
Now it has picked up Ebates.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/erikamorphy/2014/09/...ere-comes-rakuten/
July 7, 2025
In the fast-changing world of telecommunications, the partnership between Rakuten Symphony and Tejas Networks marks a key milestone for Open RAN in India. Rakuten Symphony brings cloud-native software expertise. Tejas adds advanced 4G and 5G radio technologies. Together, they are set to transform the telecom industry. Open RAN’s modular and vendor-agnostic design increases flexibility. It also improves cost-efficiency. As a result, the model enables more innovative and adaptive network solutions. This collaboration aims to speed up India’s telecom infrastructure development. At the same time, it strengthens the country’s standing in the global telecom market.
https://connectcx.ai/...ony-and-tejas-power-open-ran-growth-in-india/
Rakuten Mobile won a half million subscribers in the last 130 days = 1.4 million subscribers on a yearly base or 350.000 subscribers every quarter
Tokyo, February 28, 2025 – Rakuten Mobile, Inc. today announced that its total number of subscribers has surpassed 8.5 million as of February 27, 2025, approximately five years since the company’s full-scale launch as a mobile network operator (MNO).
https://corp.mobile.rakuten.co.jp/english/news/press/2025/0228_02/
Tokyo, Japan – Rakuten Mobile, Japan’s newest and most modern mobile network, today announced that its total number of subscribers has surpassed 9 million as of July 7, 2025.
https://www.telecomtv.com/content/5g/...-9-million-subscribers-53391/
Platz 1 in der Gesamtwertung in drei finanzbezogenen Rankings, die von FP in der ersten Umfrage des Jahres bewertet wurden
https://www.rakuten-sec.co.jp/web/company/...se/pdf/press20250701.pdf
Therefore, achieving revenue that exceeds this level will directly lead to positive EBITDA. Regarding customer acquisition, we will continue to work on improving network quality and driving awareness, while also reviewing acquisition channels to broaden our subscriber base from urban to rural areas and from younger to middle-aged and older demographics. For ARPU, we will work to increase it by expanding and strengthening the sales of optional menus and services.
Latest Integrated Report - Fiscal 2024
https://global.rakuten.com/corp/investors/documents/annual.html
Singletons around the world are experiencing dating app burnout, but new data shows young Filipinos won’t stop swiping for “the one,” even on Viber
July 07, 2025
In July 2024, Forbes Health said 79 percent of Generation Z and 80 percent of millennials experienced fatigue from using dating apps like Tinder and Bumble. But messaging app Rakuten Viber recently reported that the most active online daters are 25 to 30 years old, which means that maybe they’re not entirely sick of online dating just yet.
Viber launched its dating feature earlier this year, in time for Valentine’s Day in February. While it is unknown how many have used the feature globally and in the Philippines, Viber reports that 92 percent of Filipino users start conversations within a minute of matching with others. The messaging app says this means Filipino users are “actively seeking potential partners” and not just creating dormant dating profiles that will leave you hanging.
With the dating feature, Viber says it also wants to tackle concerns regarding privacy and safety, particularly with regard to catfishing and love scams. But are these really what’s causing burnout?
ndia-based software company Octal IT Solution said in a December 2024 report that the number of dating app users is expected to exceed 500 million this year as the market continues to grow in India, Southeast Asia, and Africa.
Viber is also in a unique position in this landscape. While many dating apps fall into a delete-and-redownload cycle, users who grow tired of chatting up matches on Viber Dating may not delete the app, because they still use it to communicate with friends and family. And so, despite safety concerns and the burnout, it looks like online dating services in the Philippines aren’t going anywhere.
https://rollingstonephilippines.com/culture/tech/...line-dating-apps/
Rakuten Mobile, Japan’s newest and most modern mobile network, announced that its total number of subscribers has surpassed 9 million as of July 7, 2025. Driven by initiatives tailored to a wide range of customers, new subscriptions at Rakuten Mobile stores have increased by approximately 20% year-on-year (YoY).
Celebrating its fifth anniversary this April, Rakuten Mobile continues on its mission to democratize the mobile industry, building on the progress made since its full-scale launch in April 2020. The company has expanded its nationwide coverage, enhanced communication quality and speed, and offers unlimited data through the Rakuten Saikyo Plan.
https://www.thefastmode.com/technology-solutions/...h-20-store-growth
s with 20% Store Growth
Rakuten Mobile, Japan’s newest and most modern mobile network, announced that its total number of subscribers has surpassed 9 million as of July 7, 2025. Driven by initiatives tailored to a wide range of customers, new subscriptions at Rakuten Mobile stores have increased by approximately 20% year-on-year (YoY).
Celebrating its fifth anniversary this April, Rakuten Mobile continues on its mission to democratize the mobile industry, building on the progress made since its full-scale launch in April 2020. The company has expanded its nationwide coverage, enhanced communication quality and speed, and offers unlimited data through the Rakuten Saikyo Plan.
https://www.thefastmode.com/technology-solutions/...h-20-store-growth
Opening access for Singapore merchants to Rakuten’s network of more than 100 million registered member accounts in Japan
Tokyo and Singapore, July 9, 2025 – Rakuten Group, Inc. today announced that Singapore-based businesses can now sell directly on Rakuten Ichiba, Japan’s leading e-commerce marketplace with over 100 million registered member accounts. With a 27% market share and nearly 6 trillion JPY in domestic gross merchandise sales in 2024, Rakuten Ichiba offers merchants in Singapore a powerful platform to reach Japanese consumers and grow their presence in the region.
This move marks a significant milestone for both Rakuten and the global e-commerce market. Until now, Rakuten Ichiba primarily served merchants from Japan, South Korea, China, select European nations, the United States and Canada. With this expansion, Singapore-based businesses gain direct access to Japan’s online marketplace through Rakuten Ichiba, extending the platform’s reach in Southeast Asia and accelerating its global growth.
Rakuten Ichiba is a leading online destination in Japan, known for its diverse product offerings across key categories such as household goods, apparel and food. Japanese consumers trust Rakuten Ichiba for its security, transparency, detailed product information and quality shopping experiences.
Takafumi Kanatani, Vice General Manager of Rakuten Ichiba’s Overseas Sales Strategy Department, said, “Singapore’s role as a dynamic Asian retail hub, home to both established brands and innovative startups, positions its companies well to benefit from this opportunity. By joining Rakuten Ichiba, Singaporean merchants can directly connect with Japanese customers, expand their sales channels and grow their presence in Japan’s strong market.”
A key advantage for Singaporean businesses is the ability to ship directly from their warehouses in Singapore to customers in Japan, without the need for a local presence or stock inventory. This increases flexibility in inventory management and logistics, enabling Singapore merchants to deliver a broader and more dynamic selection of products to consumers in Japan.
Rakuten also offers dedicated support tailored to international merchants, including E-Commerce Consultants who guide sellers in maximizing their storefront performance and visibility. This hands-on assistance ensures that businesses can confidently navigate the platform while maintaining full control over their brand identity, product listings and customer engagement.
In addition to storefront management, sellers can also benefit from Rakuten’s unique ecosystem – leveraging advanced AI-powered sales tools, participation in exclusive shopping events and Japan’s leading loyalty program, Rakuten Points – all designed to boost customer loyalty and drive sustained growth in Japan’s market.
Looking ahead, Rakuten is committed to further expanding its international seller base and enhancing its platform to support global businesses. This latest initiative underscores Rakuten Ichiba’s vision to create a truly borderless e-commerce ecosystem that benefits both merchants and customers worldwide.
https://global.rakuten.com/corp/news/press/2025/0709_01.html
By Valeria Levantino
Communications Manager Rakuten Symphony
June 20, 2025
https://symphony.rakuten.com/blog/...versation-with-fleming-sebastian
The global e-commerce market size has surged to USD 21.62 trillion in 2025 and is projected to skyrocket to USD 75.12 trillion by 2034, growing at a robust CAGR of 14.88% from 2025 to 2034. E-commerce involves all commercial transactions conducted electronically, including business-to-business (B2B), business-to-consumer (B2C), consumer-to-consumer (C2C), and direct-to-consumer (D2C) transactions.
July 08, 2025 06:50 ET | Source: Precedence Research
https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2025/...12-Tn-by-2034.html
JPMorgan has initiated coverage on Rakuten Inc . (TYO:4755:JP) with an Overweight rating and a price target of JPY1,150.00, citing the company’s improving mobile segment and expanding ecosystem.
The Japanese e-commerce and digital services company has experienced share price weakness since December 2017 due to concerns about growing investment burdens in its mobile segment, according to JPMorgan. The firm notes that these losses are now diminishing, positioning Rakuten for improved financial performance.
From a financial perspective, JPMorgan believes Rakuten’s credit risk will remain limited as free cash flow improves.
https://www.investing.com/news/analyst-ratings/...growth-93CH-4128655
https://goodereader.com/blog/kobo-ereader-news/...-for-prime-day-2025
By Dhruv Sood
Global Digital Marketing Manager Rakuten Symphony
July 9, 2025
https://symphony.rakuten.com/blog/...shift-towards-intelligent-growth
Following on from May’s superb Optimism event, we caught up with Rakuten Advertising’s VP of AI Strategy and Operations to find out more about the platform’s AI upgrades.
July 10, 2025
Sol Wilkinson: You just launched Detect, Storefronts, and Prompt. In simple terms, what do they do for your clients?
Ben Cox: Detect gives brands the visibility they’ve long needed, identifying programme compliance issues, monitoring affiliate behaviour, and helping partnerships operate at their full potential.
Storefronts empowers creators and influencers to curate products in a way that drives authentic engagement and performance, and also helps streamline the customer experience and path to purchase.
Prompt, our newest reporting tool, applies our AI to simplify ad hoc report requests, surfacing actionable insights on performance, audiences, and trends to help marketers make faster, smarter decisions quickly and in plain language.
SW: What sets Rakuten Advertising’s AI apart from what other platforms are doing right now?
BC: What sets us apart is how deeply our AI is rooted in affiliate expertise. We’re not just applying generic models; we’ve built Affiliate Intelligence to reflect decades of network data, partner behaviours, and performance trends. This is all built on the data flywheel concept, where the continuous collection of insights from our network fuels new cycles of customer value and product iterations.
SW: Do you see AI becoming the core engine of affiliate marketing? How will that change the game for advertisers and affiliates?
BC: Absolutely, but it’s not just affiliate, AI is transforming the digital marketing landscape as a whole. What makes Rakuten unique is that we’ve made deliberate investments to be at the forefront of that change.
AI and large language models (LLMs) go beyond abstract potential — they provide the scalability and automation needed to unlock opportunities that were previously impractical, especially across large, complex networks of bespoke partnerships. With emerging capabilities like agentic reasoning, we're beginning to orchestrate proactive, context-aware decision-making support at scale, reshaping how affiliate programmes are managed and optimised.
We have the largest data science team in the industry dedicated specifically to affiliate marketing, and we've invested heavily in the infrastructure to operationalise AI across our platform. Our models are not generic — they’re purpose-built and trained on affiliate-specific, global use cases, giving Rakuten Advertising a significant uniqueness and leadership in the affiliate marketing industry.
At Rakuten, AI is foundational to our culture. It’s not just a layer of technology — it’s embedded in how we think, how we operate, and how we solve challenges for the affiliate ecosystem. We view AI as a driver of industry transformation, reshaping not only our internal processes but also the way our customers engage with our solutions.
With AI, we’re moving beyond traditional optimisation into real-time intelligence, enabling automated recommendations, proactive campaign management, and dynamic performance tuning at scale. This fundamentally changes how advertisers approach partnerships, measurement, and growth. We’re not simply responding to the AI era — we’re helping lead it.
https://hellopartner.com/2025/07/10/...gs-ben-cox-talks-new-ai-tools/
Rajalakshmy Rajeev
Project Specialist - Communications, Rakuten Symphony Deutschland
https://symphony.rakuten.com/blog/...ersation-with-andreas-kleanthous
Clear Street initiates coverage on AST Spacemobile stock with Buy rating
Published 07/10/2025
Clear Street initiated coverage on AST Spacemobile with a Buy rating and a $59.00 price target on Thursday. The stock, which has surged over 100% year-to-date, currently trades near $42.50, with analyst targets ranging from $30 to $64.
The research firm sees AST Spacemobile as a long-term mobile growth opportunity targeting approximately 5.6 billion global mobile users with patented satellite technology that eliminates the need for specialized ground equipment.
The firm highlighted key collaborations supporting AST Spacemobile’s growth potential, including partnerships with Verizon (NYSE:VZ), AT&T, Vodafone (NASDAQ:VOD), and Rakuten.
Rakuten Group Inc. has engaged banks for a yen bond issuance totaling about 150 billion yen (US$1 billion), according to Daiwa Securities Co., one of the underwriters.
The Japanese ecommerce firm aims to attract both retail and institutional investors.
Of the total offering, around 130 billion yen (US$888.1 million) will target retail buyers. The institutional portion will be issued as sustainability debt.
https://www.techinasia.com/news/...engages-banks-for-1b-yen-bond-deal
Rakuten’s yen bond offering represents a notable shift in its funding strategy following heavy reliance on the U.S. dollar market.
The company issued $3.8 billion in dollar bonds between January and April 2024 alone, highlighting its previous dependence on foreign currency financing.
This pivot to yen-denominated bonds may be aimed at reducing foreign exchange risk, especially significant for a company reporting 19 consecutive quarterly losses as mentioned in the news article.
The decision to target both retail and institutional investors with different bond structures demonstrates a sophisticated approach to capital raising, with the retail portion accounting for approximately 87% of the total offering.
By leveraging its strong consumer brand recognition in Japan, Rakuten can potentially secure better terms from retail investors than it might from institutional investors who would place greater emphasis on its speculative-grade rating.
https://www.techinasia.com/news/...engages-banks-for-1b-yen-bond-deal
Rakuten’s Mikitani wants to sell bonds to Japanese investors
Jan 17, 2025
Billionaire Hiroshi Mikitani said that his Rakuten Group is keen to sell more bonds to Japanese investors to help diversify funding that has been focused on overseas debt markets.
"Bond investors are very, very confident or building their confidence in our business,” Mikitani, 59, said in an interview, pointing out that the yields sought by investors when buying the e-commerce conglomerate’s debt had declined "significantly.”
Market pricing indicates that views on Rakuten are improving after years of losses and a stretched balance sheet. Successfully tapping the domestic bond market would add to this momentum, though many challenges remain.
Rakuten’s credit rating sits below the "A” level required by many investors in Japan, it is due to redeem ¥400 billion ($2.6 billion) in bonds in the first half of this year, and despite improvement, Rakuten still faces large losses in its mobile business.
Mikitani said nothing has been decided yet on the size and timing of any debt issuance in Japan. The company’s last domestic sale was in February 2023, to retail investors.
Still, the spread between the yield on Rakuten’s debt and Japanese government bonds has narrowed significantly, showing greater investor confidence. For Rakuten yen bonds due in December 2026, the spread contracted to about 180 basis points as of Thursday, down from around 490 basis points a year earlier, according to the data compiled by Bloomberg.
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/business/2025/01/17/...n-mikitani-bonds/
Operating model challenges often mirror telco org structures
Rakuten is not a telecom company. We are an internet company doing telecom. That means we understand philosophically how to build platforms, run our business on data and drive growth through digital enablement. The solutions are always the same:
Simplify, don’t complicate.
Build horizontal platforms across the total business.
Use data to drive operational efficiency and business advantage.
Having led operations initiatives within a major telco, I have seen firsthand the organizational structures that can surface.
In many cases, the teams that plan, build and operate the network are siloed from each other. Each department moves full speed ahead with its own systems, data and priorities. Sure, there are the recurring pushes for a centralized data strategy, but adhering long-term to these strategies can prove to be a challenge in itself.
There's often hesitation to hand over control, driven by concerns that centralized teams may not bring the same level of care and contextual understanding as the teams who serve as dedicated custodians of the data.
So, we get the fragmented data, conflicting goals and ultimately, limited visibility.
This may seem at odds with the desire to work from a unified platform and clean analytics. For the most part, there is agreement on this dichotomy. If it is not addressed, efforts to modernize and automate keep running into the same wall.
It is increasingly clear that modernization is no longer optional given legacy network inefficiency and aging workforces, necessitating faster transformation.
5G Standalone and slicing will only increase complexity, exposing telcos to growing risk if foundational issues remain unresolved.
Advancing past patchwork OSS approaches
It is not a secret that OSS management looks similar to even a decade ago.
All these various stacks were less detrimental when services were simpler and customers interacted with just one part of the network at a time.
Those days are gone.
Customer experiences now span multiple services and infrastructure layers as the “unified view” nirvana state remains elusive.
Horizontal, data-centric platforms are emerging as essential then to build the kind of observability, automation and AI intelligence that will take operators where they want.
It’s not about just layering AI on top of the old way of working, but building a different foundation entirely.
We have successfully implemented a foundation that can surface data from across domains and align to a single operational context. Because of this, the data can serve the needs of an AI tool while giving project managers, field ops and assurance teams that long-desired unified view.
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/...ent-operations-begin-day-zero-hsede
24/02/2025
Telecom is a complex business. And telecom has a love/hate relationship with complexity. Complexity that comes at a cost – in more systems, more people and skills, in training and re-training. The price of progress is high, and getting higher, as telcos struggle to both retain the knowledge required to run their older networks and hire the skills and expertise to run new ones. The effect of that is low investor confidence – in an industry that is fully understood as foundational to the modern world.
Appledore sees some evidence that this is changing. In particular, some in the industry are promoting simplification to the level of strategy. Specifically, an active effort to substantially reduce the count of ALL the systems used to plan, build, operate and assure networks – by changing the fundamental approach.
Simpler is better.
Rakuten has a history of challenging the accepted wisdom. Having rolled out a world-class network nationwide in just three years, based on a radically simpler alternative architecture to conventional networks, Rakuten is now challenging the conventional wisdom in OSS: that it must be complex. Sophisticated? Yes. Powerful? Yes. Complex? No. The Rakuten mantra is not to manage complexity, but instead to eliminate it. Simpler is better, faster, and cheaper.
This paper looks at the major changes Rakuten Symphony has made in its OSS business and proposition as it seeks to continue providing the industry with a visionary new alternative to decades of received wisdom. We explore where and how Rakuten has removed complexity from OSS – without losing capability. Its thinking about data, observability and AI is central to this new vision, in the way that hierarchies, standardised interfaces and inventory have been for conventional OSS.
https://appledoreresearch.com/report/rakutens-oss-simplification/
Research and Markets
July 2, 2025
The B2C Mobility Sharing Market is set to soar from USD 57.9 billion in 2025 to USD 325.5 billion by 2034, at a CAGR of 21.1%. Driven by urbanization, eco-awareness, and demand for flexible transport, the market thrives on apps, EV investments, and autonomy.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/...aring-market-outlook-130900369.html