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Japanese firms turn to global leaders Nvidia, SoftBank, and Microsoft for cutting-edge AI

CryptopolitanApr 24, 2026 12:59 PM
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Japan’s lag in AI innovation is forging unlikely alliances. Japanese businesses are betting on technological partnerships. The country’s largest startup hub, Station Ai, is teaming up with SoftBank (TYO: 9984) and Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) to fast-track five startups under a new “AI Boost Program.”

The first cohort includes manufacturing AI startup Ollo, enterprise AI developer Karakuri, healthcare startup Cross Medicine, generative AI platform provider Final Aim, and computer motion analysis company Playbox.

The AI Boost Program, launched in September 2025, is designed to solve structural barriers that AI startups face in Japan. It offers free access to Softbank’s high-performance GPU systems, support from NVIDIA engineers, business development guidance towards proof-of-concept and introductions to investors.

Japan’s slow start in AI may offer a latecomer advantage, enabling Japanese companies to skip straight to advanced generative AI.

In a statement, co-founder and CEO of Final Aim, Masafumi Asakura, said the AI Boost Program’s GPU resources will be harnessed in a way that advances generative AI technology and minimizes IP risks.

NVIDIA has also promised investment in Japan’s robotics sector. As previously reported by Cryptopolitan, NVIDIA partnered with Fujitsu in October last year to build a full-stack AI infrastructure aimed at improving competitiveness.

Microsoft joins in with major funding

Another sign of momentum came in early April, when Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) announced a 1.6 trillion yen ($10 billion) investment in Japan from 2026 to 2029.

While Japan ranks as the world’s fourth-largest economy, it’s home to only 251 AI companies, including 93 startups, according to market intelligence group, Tracxn. It’s a stark contrast to the United States, which boasts some 30,000 AI companies, followed by approximately 5,000 in China, and 1,500 in Germany.

How does Japan’s startup culture differ from the US?

There’s a significant cultural gap in the way Japanese and Western companies approach innovation.
“There is a fundamentally different way of building a business in Japan,” said Sam Ghiotti, founder and CEO of Habitto at Japan Fintech Week 2026. “The biggest shock as a founder in Japan is that Americans need to be first and Japanese need to be right.”

At its core, it’s a trade-off between rapid scaling and meticulous perfection.

“Japanese regulators, large Japanese corporations, and even startups want to make sure that their systems are extremely well built, trusted and compliant,” said Shin Sakane, Co-CEO of fintech startup TRADOM Inc, speaking at Japan Fintech Week 2026. “They start off with the aim of reaching 100% or 120% perfection.”

The power of private partnerships

Instead of competing head-on with US pioneers, Google and OpenAI, Japan is pursuing a collaborative path to catch up.

Sakane said that in the early days of AI, founders in Japan sought to gatekeep technology. But now that attitude has shifted in favor of partnerships.

“Technology is advancing so fast we need to adapt to the latest technology available in the world and keep up. We now build our models in partnership with companies producing the latest technology.”

That means companies that once operated independently are now joining forces.

On April 12, Softbank, NEC, Honda, and Sony Group announced the formation of a new jointly operated company called ‘Japan AI Foundation Model Development’ in a bid to encourage homegrown AI innovation.

A Softbank executive will serve as president, and the newly founded company will draw on approximately 100 senior AI engineers previously dispersed across Softbank, NEC, Honda, and Sony Group.

Each holds a 10% stake in the newly launched company, while Nippon Steel and Japan’s three megabanks MUFG, SMBC, and Mizuho will take part as minority shareholders.

The government steps in to scale AI

The initiative aligns with Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry’s push to build domestic AI capabilities. It has earmarked 1 trillion yen (approx. $5 billion) over five years from fiscal 2026 to develop foundation models at the one trillion parameter scale.

The funding is expected to support computing infrastructure, research partnerships and workforce training.

But, industry leaders like Sam Ghiotti, CEO of Habitto, say it’s still unclear whether success will favor those who move fastest or those who take the most strategic approach.

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