JAPANESE CIGARETTE SALES FALL
TOKYO, -- Domestic cigarette sales fell by 4.3% to 258.5 billion cigarettes in the year ended March 31, marking a ninth straight year of decline, the Tobacco Institute of Japan said Thursday.
The decrease is attributed to the growing trend to quit, as well as tighter smoking-related regulation. Last fiscal year's sales figure is down 26% from the fiscal 1996 peak.
In fiscal 2007, sales of domestically produced cigarettes slid 4.1% to 167.8 billion, while imports sank 4.6% to 90.7 billion.
Japan Tobacco Inc. (TSE:2914) saw its market share edge up 0.1 percentage point to 64.9%, its first such gain since the company's 1985 privatization.
As for the outlook, JT expects the market to "keep declining about 4-5% every year," according to Executive Vice President Mitsuomi Koizumi.
Asked about the impact, if any, of the age-verifying cigarette vending machines that have debuted in two Kyushu prefectures, Koizumi says: "More people are buying cigarettes at convenience stores for now, but there has been no impact on overall sales."
The decrease is attributed to the growing trend to quit, as well as tighter smoking-related regulation. Last fiscal year's sales figure is down 26% from the fiscal 1996 peak.
In fiscal 2007, sales of domestically produced cigarettes slid 4.1% to 167.8 billion, while imports sank 4.6% to 90.7 billion.
Japan Tobacco Inc. (TSE:2914) saw its market share edge up 0.1 percentage point to 64.9%, its first such gain since the company's 1985 privatization.
As for the outlook, JT expects the market to "keep declining about 4-5% every year," according to Executive Vice President Mitsuomi Koizumi.
Asked about the impact, if any, of the age-verifying cigarette vending machines that have debuted in two Kyushu prefectures, Koizumi says: "More people are buying cigarettes at convenience stores for now, but there has been no impact on overall sales."