Asia Markets

Japan Display shares fall as bailout deal gets delayed

Key Points
  • Japan Display has been aiming for a capital increase of 110 billion yen ($990 million), most of it through the issuance of stocks and bonds to external investors.
  • In a statement late on Tuesday, Japan Display said it was making progress towards an agreement and that it was in the final stage of negotiations. It did not give a new time frame for an expected deal.

A high-definition liquid crystal display (LCD), developed by Japan Display, at the company's plant in Mobara, Chiba Prefecture, Japan, on June 3, 2013.
Kiyoshi Ota | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Shares of Japan Display fell as much as 7 percent early on Wednesday after saying it had yet to reach an agreement for a tie-up with an external party that it had said would be sealed by the first half of this week.

Japan Display has been aiming for a capital increase of 110 billion yen ($990 million), most of it through the issuance of stocks and bonds to external investors.

It has not named the external investors, although two sources have previously told Reuters it was looking to an investor group, led by China Silkroad Investment Capital, for a bailout.

In a statement late on Tuesday, Japan Display said it was making progress towards an agreement and that it was in the final stage of negotiations. It did not give a new time frame for an expected deal.