Michael Fritzell of Asian Century Stocks presented his in-depth investment thesis on Freee (Japan: 4478) at Asian Investing Summit 2026.
Thesis summary:
Freee is a Japanese cloud-native software platform that functions as a back-office operating system for small and medium-sized enterprises, founded in 2013 by ex-Google executive Daisuke Sasaki and CTO Ryu Yokoji. Often described as the Japanese analogue of Australia’s Xero, Freee began as an accounting tool and has expanded into HR, payroll, tax filing, expense reimbursement, electronic signatures, invoicing, sales management, and a third-party app store with integrations including Rakuten, Amazon, and Line. The platform serves roughly 500,000 businesses and, together with Money Forward, holds about 15% of the Japanese accounting software market, with legacy desktop incumbents such as Yayoi lagging behind. Michael views Freee as the true disruptor because its automated bank and credit card linkages generate entries with minimal manual input, positioning it to take share as Japanese SMEs digitalize from a base of Excel and paper.
The core of Michael’s thesis is that the market has wrongly extrapolated generative-AI commoditization risk onto enterprise SaaS. Japanese software stocks are down sharply, and Freee itself has fallen roughly 30% YTD and about 50% from its 2025 peak, with some Japanese portfolio managers reportedly barred from touching the sector. Michael argues that enterprise systems of record are structurally different from point solutions: AI remains probabilistic and unsuitable for mission-critical accounting work, distribution and trust matter more than raw code, and Freee sits on proprietary transactional data from its half-million customers with more than 1,000 banking and financial integrations that are not replicable by vibe-coded alternatives. Monthly overall churn has declined to 1.1% in 2025 (corporate churn 0.5%, lower than Money Forward’s), and learning costs, limited data migration, and a growing app store bolster the moat.
The growth algorithm has compounded revenues at a 39% CAGR since 2019, driven by a 25% CAGR in paying customers (from 160,000 to about 607,000) and a 9% CAGR in ARPU (to roughly JPY 56,700). With Japanese cloud accounting penetration at only ~25-30%, Michael sees room for penetration to triple toward Australian and US levels, supporting sustained 30% top-line growth. Management has guided to 26% revenue growth in the current fiscal year and has historically beaten its targets, recently posting close to 30%. Share-count dilution is near zero, unlike typical US SaaS peers, so organic growth accrues cleanly to minorities.
Michael believes long-term operating margins can exceed 30% and potentially reach 40%, consistent with Xero at ~55% EBITDA margins in Australia/New Zealand, Fortnox at ~50% EBIT margins in Sweden, and Intuit’s SME segment at ~50%. ARPU of roughly $30-40 per month is low for the value delivered, and modest pricing uplift would convert the existing cost base into substantial leverage, analogous to Netflix’s pricing journey a decade ago. Catalysts include Money Forward’s September 2025 price hike (driving prospects to Freee), Freee’s December 2025 launch of consolidation accounting and manual double-entry bookkeeping (closing the feature gap), and accelerated AI product rollouts led by newly appointed Chief AI Officer Ryu Yokoji, including automated receipt capture, a ChatGPT tax guidance mini-app, an AI website builder, and a business-succession matching tool. Daisuke Sasaki, founder-CEO, is described as serious, non-promotional, and fully focused on building the business.
The shares recently traded at 2.3x EV/Sales, roughly half the multiple of industry peers and meaningfully below Money Forward. Freee is around GAAP breakeven with capitalized software costs, and Japanese retail investors appear to discount the delayed profitability inherent in the SaaS model. On Michael’s numbers, EV/Sales compresses to 2.0x in FY2027, then 1.7x, 1.4x, and 1.2x, with P/E falling below 10x by 2030 as margins scale into management’s long-term 30% operating margin guidance. Using conservative margin and exit-multiple assumptions, Michael arrives at an IRR of about 25%, with no dividend — the return is entirely a function of growth continuing from the guided 26% toward the high teens over several years. Some sell-side targets (Macquarie among them) sit at roughly double the recent share price, consistent with Michael’s view that the current multiple reflects near-term AI disruption fears rather than the underlying economics of a dominant, compounding Japanese SME platform.
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About the instructor:
Michael Fritzell is a Singapore-based analyst and the author of Asian Century Stocks. He has worked as an analyst and co-portfolio manager in Asia for well over a decade.
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