What is the relationship between the bankruptcy of Japanese enterprises in Yaohan and fund-raising?

Financing leads to economic fracture. According to everyone's inquiries, Japan entered the bubble economy period in the 1980s, and the whole country thought that real estate prices would rise. At that time, many Japanese companies had been hit hard. In that era when survival was a problem, not many enterprises still had the idea of becoming bigger and stronger. But at that time, Yaohan Group was an exception, and the company was in a period of rapid expansion. When the bank had no chance to lend money, I found Wada Kazuo and drew a grand blueprint: buy a piece of land, build a shopping center on this piece of land, use it for my own use and rent it out, and I can get at least three profits: the profit from land appreciation, the profit from real estate appreciation and the profit from shops rental. Mr. Hotan thinks it makes sense, so he desperately buys land and then builds his own shopping center, making Yaohan the largest Japanese business group. However, 1990, Japan's bubble economy collapsed. Overnight, land prices plummeted, the entire consumer market fell into a downturn, and banks began to collect debts. Only then did I realize how stupid it was to buy land to build a house, but I regretted it.