Fukui Computer Holdings, a construction software developer headquartered in Fukui Prefecture and traded as ticker 9790, has a new major shareholder group. In an amended extraordinary report filed July 6, 2026, correcting an earlier disclosure on the same matter, the company said Hikari Tsushin, Inc. and three joint holders raised their combined voting rights past the 10% mark that Japanese securities rules treat as the threshold for major-shareholder status.
The filing puts numbers on the move: the group's voting rights rose from 18,572 units, equal to 8.99% of the company, to 20,688 units, or 10.01%. The change took effect May 20, 2026.
The group behind the increase is Hikari Tsushin itself plus three joint holders named in the filing: UH Partners 2, UH7, and Sakura General Insurance. The report states plainly that a change in the company's major shareholders occurred; it does not lay out what the four parties plan to do with the position, and this filing is a disclosure obligation rather than a strategy statement.
Fukui Computer Holdings' representative director and CEO is Koichi Sato. The report was filed with the Hokuriku Finance Bureau, the regional Ministry of Finance office that handles disclosures for issuers based outside Tokyo, and it formally amends an earlier extraordinary report identified as document S100Y7KT.
Crossing 10% is a modest move in absolute terms, but it is the kind of threshold Japanese disclosure law is built around: shareholders must report when their combined stake passes fixed marks, and issuers must then file their own notice naming the holder. For Fukui Computer Holdings, the filing confirms who now sits just above that line. What the stake means for the company beyond that is not addressed in the document.
