Global Way has completed the next corporate step in its livestream-creator business. TimeTicket, which the company describes as a consolidated subsidiary, has established Westgate Entertainment as a 75%-owned sub-subsidiary to support and manage livestream creators. The new unit has capital of 20 million yen, was established in April, began business in May, shares TimeTicket’s Tokyo address, and will be led by Masato Kagami, who also heads Global Way and TimeTicket.
Why it matters is less as a one-day earnings event than as a map of how the group wants to organise the business. TimeTicket’s own disclosed activities are broader, including development and operation of the TimeTicket service and management of a TikTok livestreamer office. Westgate Entertainment’s remit is narrower, focused on creator support and management. In other words, the group has added a separate legal vehicle around the creator-management side of the operation.
The company put a modest label on the financial effect. It said the impact of the new unit is already reflected in its consolidated outlook for the year ending March 2027, without giving revenue, client or operating targets for Westgate Entertainment. A same-day update also showed wider buildout around TimeTicket: Global Way said a $500,000 capital increase into U.S. unit TimeTicket Inc., which is set up for live-streaming agency work and IP planning and consulting, had been paid in during May, and described the earnings effect as light.
