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Mochikyūkin

In sumo, sekitori-ranked wrestlers receive a monetary reward at the end of each tournament that supplements their basic salary. This system is called rikishi hōshōkin (力士褒賞金), and it is based on a personal bounty held by each wrestler called mochikyūkin (持ち給金; lit. "salary holdings" or "possession wages").

Overview

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In addition to their monthly salary, rikishi are eligible to receive monetary awards based on their performance in tournaments. These bounties are paid six times a year, at each tournament, to sekitori-ranked wrestlers (competing in the jūryō division or higher). Wrestlers in the makushita division and below do not receive a salary, though they are given an allowance.

Since the most common way to increase the bounties is to achieve kachi-koshi (having more wins than losses) in a tournament, a match in which a wrestler stands at seven wins and seven losses on the final day of a tournament will decide whether he achieves kachi-koshi or make-koshi (more losses than wins). This occurrence is sometimes referred to as kyūkin sumō (給金相撲; lit. "wage sumo"); a win in these circumstances is called kyūkin naoshi (給金直し; lit. "wage correction"), and a loss is called mukō kyūkin (向こう給金; lit. "opposite side wage").

The yokozuna with the smallest bounty was the 60th yokozuna Futahaguro, who never won a championship. Having been in the makuuchi ranks for only 20 tournaments, he had received only ¥169 at the time of his expulsion.

Calculation

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Minimum values
Rank Mochikyūkin Payment
Yokozuna ¥150 ¥600,000
Ōzeki ¥100 ¥400,000
Makuuchi ¥60 ¥240,000
Jūryō ¥40 ¥160,000

When a wrestler enters professional sumo, he is credited with ¥3.[1] Every time he achieves kachi-koshi, this value increases by ¥0.5 (or 50 sen) for each additional win over the number of losses (e.g. ¥1.5 for a 9–6 record). No deduction is made for a make-koshi record, a leave of absence, or a suspension.

There are minimum values of mochikyūkin that are paid to wrestlers of different rank (jūryō, makuuchi, ōzeki and yokozuna), should they not be eligible for a greater amount already. If a wrestler is subsequently demoted, any amount awarded through these minimums in excess of that earned via the wrestler's win-loss record will be deducted again from the mochikyūkin account.

Bonuses

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In addition, wrestlers with outstanding performances will receive bonuses. A maegashira will receive a ¥10 bonus if he can defeat a yokozuna during a tournament. Such a win is called a kinboshi (lit. "gold star"). Former sekiwake Akinoshima won 16 kinboshi during his career,[2] which gave him a mochikyūkin account that was larger than those of many ōzeki.

Winning the makuuchi yūshō (championship) gives a bonus of ¥30, which increases to ¥50 if the championship was won with a "perfect" record of 15–0, which is called a zenshō yūshō (全勝優勝).

Conversion

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The value of the mochikyūkin account is multiplied by a predefined number to give the actual distributed monetary bonus to the sekitori wrestlers; the current multiplier, since the year 1998, is 4,000.[3] This means that, as an example, a kinboshi victory will be worth ¥240,000 per annum additional income for the remainder of the wrestler's career.

Evolution
Until 1969 1,000
1970–1984 1,500
1985–1997 2,500
1998–present 4,000

Examples

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With its strong bias towards large kachi-koshi scores and top division championships, the highest mochikyūkin accounts are credited to the strongest yokozuna. Mochikyūkin accounts of over ¥1,000 (corresponding to an additional income of ¥24 million per year) have been achieved by the very strongest yokozuna such as Taihō, Chiyonofuji and Hakuhō.

Case of Hakuhō (after the September 2021 tournament)
Addition Cumulative
Jonokuchi debut ¥3 ¥3
Kachi-koshi as makushita and below ¥18 ¥21
Promotion to jūryō ¥21¥40 ¥19 ¥40
Kachi-koshi as jūryō ¥6 ¥46
Promotion to makuuchi ¥46¥60 ¥14 ¥60
Kinboshi 1×10= ¥10 ¥102.5
Kachi-koshi from maegashira to sekiwake ¥32.5
Promotion to ōzeki ¥102.5¥102.5 (already above ¥100) ¥0 ¥102.5
Kachi-koshi as ōzeki ¥28 ¥240.5
Makuuchi yūshō as ōzeki 2×30= ¥60
Zenshō yūshō as ōzeki 1×50= ¥50
Promotion to yokozuna ¥240.5¥240.5 (already above ¥150) ¥0 ¥240.5
Kachi-koshi as yokozuna ¥386.5 ¥2,187
Makuuchi yūshō as yokozuna 27×30= ¥810
Zenshō yūshō as yokozuna 15×50= ¥750
Total ¥2,187

Hakuhō broke the record of ¥1,489 set by Taihō.

Case of Endō (after the May 2025 tournament)
Addition Cumulative
Makushita tsukedashi debut ¥3 ¥3
Kachi-koshi as makushita and below ¥3 ¥6
Promotion to jūryō ¥6¥40 ¥34 ¥40
Kachi-koshi as jūryō ¥6.5 ¥46.5
Promotion to makuuchi ¥46.5¥60 ¥13.5 ¥60
Kinboshi 1×10= ¥10 ¥81
Kachi-koshi from maegashira to sekiwake ¥11
Demotion from makuuchi ¥81¥67.5 ¥−13.5 ¥67.5
Kachi-koshi as jūryō ¥3.5 ¥71
Promotion to makuuchi ¥71¥71 (already above ¥60) ¥0 ¥71
Kinboshi 6×10= ¥60 ¥172.5
Kachi-koshi from maegashira to sekiwake ¥41.5
Kachi-koshi as jūryō ¥4.5 ¥177
Kachi-koshi from maegashira to sekiwake ¥4.5 ¥181.5
Total ¥181.5

References

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  1. ^ Miki, Shuji (18 June 2019). "Unique payroll system in the word of sumo". Japan News. Archived from the original on 20 June 2019.
  2. ^ "Akinoshima profile". Japan Sumo Association. Archived from the original on 22 March 2008. Retrieved 29 January 2010.
  3. ^ "Mochi kyuukin standings". 7 July 2018.