UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549


FORM NCSR


CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED MANAGEMENT
INVESTMENT COMPANIES

INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT FILE NUMBER 811-06142

THE JAPAN EQUITY FUND, INC.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)




c/o Daiwa Securities Trust Company
One Evertrust Plaza, 9th Floor
Jersey City, New Jersey 07302-3051

(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

c/o Daiwa Securities Trust Company
One Evertrust Plaza, 9th Floor
Jersey City, New Jersey 07302-3051

(Name and address of agent for service)

REGISTRANT'S TELEPHONE NUMBER, INCLUDING AREA CODE:  (201) 
915-3054

DATE OF FISCAL YEAR END:  October 31, 2004

DATE OF REPORTING PERIOD:  October 31, 2004


Item 1.  Reports to Stockholders.
ANNUAL REPORT
OCTOBER 31, 2004

[JAPAN EQUITY FUND LOGO]

THE JAPAN EQUITY FUND, INC.
C/O DAIWA SECURITIES TRUST COMPANY
ONE EVERTRUST PLAZA
JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY 07302

INVESTMENT MANAGER
DAIWA SB INVESTMENTS (U.S.A.) LTD.

INVESTMENT ADVISER
DAIWA SB INVESTMENTS LTD.

THE JAPAN EQUITY FUND, INC.

GENERAL INFORMATION



The Fund
The investment objective of the Fund is to outperform 
over the long term, on a total return basis (including 
appreciation and dividends), the Tokyo Stock Price Index 
("TOPIX"), a composite market-capitalization weighted index 
of all common stocks listed on the First Section of the Tokyo 
Stock Exchange ("TSE").  The Fund seeks to achieve its 
investment objective by investing substantially all of its 
assets in equity securities of companies listed on the TSE or 
listed on the over-the-counter market in Japan or listed on 
other stock exchanges in Japan.  Daiwa SB Investments 
(U.S.A.) Ltd. is the Fund's Investment Manager.  Daiwa SB 
Investments Ltd. is the Fund's Investment Adviser.  The Fund 
implements an "active" portfolio management policy, which is 
an approach that involves quantitative valuation of 
securities to identify an appropriate universe of securities 
from which to select investments, with judgmental analysis 
then applied to this universe to determine the actual 
investments to be made by the Fund.
Shareholder Information
The Fund's shares are listed on the New York Stock 
Exchange ("NYSE").  The Fund understands that its shares may 
trade periodically on certain exchanges other than the NYSE, 
but the Fund has not listed its shares on those other 
exchanges and does not encourage trading on those exchanges.
The Fund's NYSE trading symbol is "JEQ".  Weekly 
comparative net asset value ("NAV") and market price 
information about the Fund is published each Monday in THE 
WALL STREET JOURNAL, each Sunday in THE NEW YORK TIMES and 
each Saturday in BARRON'S, and also appears in many other 
newspapers.  The Fund's weekly NAV is also available by 
visiting www.daiwast.com or calling (800) 933-3440 or (201) 
915-3020.  Also, the Fund's website includes a monthly market 
review, a list of the Fund's top ten industries and holdings, 
the proxy voting policies and procedures, the code of ethics 
and the audit committee charter.
Inquiries
Inquiries concerning your share account should be 
directed to EquiServe Trust Company, N.A. (the "Plan Agent") 
at the number noted below.  All written inquiries should be 
directed to The Japan Equity Fund, Inc., c/o Daiwa Securities 
Trust Company, One Evertrust Plaza, 9th Floor, Jersey City, 
NJ 07302-3051. 
Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures
A description of the policies and procedures that are 
used by the Fund's Investment Manager to vote proxies 
relating to the Fund's portfolio securities is available (1) 
without charge, upon request, by calling (201) 915-3054; (2) 
by visiting www.daiwast.com; and (3) as an exhibit to the 
Fund's annual report on Form N-CSR which is available on the 
website of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the 
"Commission") at www.sec.gov. Information regarding how the 
Investment Manager votes these proxies is now available by 
calling the same number and the Commission's website.  The 
Fund has filed its first report on Form N-PX covering the 
Fund's proxy voting record for the 12-month period ended June 
30, 2004.
Quarterly Portfolio of Investments
A Portfolio of Investments will be filed as of the end 
of the first and third quarter of each fiscal year on Form N-
Q and will be available on the Commission's website at 
www.sec.gov.  Additionally, the Portfolio of Investments may 
be reviewed and copied at the Commission's Public Reference 
Room in Washington D.C.  Information on the operation of the 
Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling (800) SEC-
0330.  The quarterly Portfolio of Investments will be made 
available without charge, upon request, by calling (201) 915-
3054.
Dividend Reinvestment and Cash Purchase Plan
A Dividend Reinvestment and Cash Purchase Plan (the 
"Plan") is available to provide Shareholders with automatic 
reinvestment of dividends and capital gain distributions in 
additional Fund shares.  The Plan also allows you to make 
optional annual cash investments in Fund shares through the 
Plan Agent.  A brochure fully describing the Plan's terms and 
conditions is available from the Plan Agent by calling (800) 
426-5523 or by writing The Japan Equity Fund, Inc., c/o 
EquiServe Trust Company, N.A., P.O. Box 43010, Providence, RI 
02940-3010.
A brief summary of the material aspects of the Plan 
follows:
Who can participate in the Plan?  If you wish to 
participate and your shares are held in your name, you may 
elect to become a direct participant in the Plan by 
completing and mailing the Enrollment Authorization form on 
the back cover of the Dividend Reinvestment and Cash 
Purchase Plan Brochure available from the Plan Agent.  
However, if your shares are held in the name of a brokerage 
firm, bank or nominee, you should instruct your nominee to 
participate in the Plan on your behalf.  If your nominee is 
unable to participate in the Plan for you, you should 
request that your shares be registered in your name, so 
that you may elect to participate directly in the Plan.
May I withdraw from the Plan?   If your shares are 
held in your name and you wish to receive all dividends and 
capital gain distributions in cash rather than in shares, 
you may withdraw from the Plan without penalty at any time 
by contacting the Plan Agent.  If your shares are held in 
nominee name, you should be able to withdraw from the Plan 
without a penalty at any time by sending written notice to 
your nominee.  If you withdraw, you or your nominee will 
receive a share certificate for all full shares or, if you 
wish, the Plan Agent will sell your shares and send you the 
proceeds, after the deduction of brokerage commissions.  
The Plan Agent will convert any fractional shares to cash 
at the then-current market price and send to you a check 
for the proceeds.
How are the dividends and distributions reinvested?  
If the market price of the Fund's shares on the payment 
date should equal or exceed their net asset value per 
share, the Fund will issue new shares to you at the higher 
of net asset value or 95% of the then-current market price.  
If the market price is lower than net asset value per 
share, the Fund will issue new shares to you at the market 
price.  If the dividends or distributions are declared and 
payable as cash only, you will receive shares purchased for 
you by the Plan Agent on the NYSE or otherwise on the open 
market to the extent available.
What is the Cash Purchase feature?  The Plan 
participants have the option of making annual investments 
in Fund shares through the Plan Agent.  You may invest any 
amount from $100 to $3,000 annually.  The Plan Agent will 
purchase shares for you on the NYSE or otherwise on the 
open market on or about February 15th of each year.  Plan 
participants should send voluntary cash payments to be 
received by the Plan Agent approximately ten days before 
the annual purchase date.  The Plan Agent will return any 
cash payments received more than thirty days prior to the 
purchase date.  You may withdraw a voluntary cash payment 
by written notice, if the notice is received by the Plan 
Agent not less that two business days before the purchase 
date.
Is there a cost to participate?  There are no Plan 
charges or brokerage charges for shares issued directly by 
the Fund.  However, each participant will pay a pro rata 
portion of brokerage commissions for shares purchased on 
the NYSE or on the open market by the Plan Agent.
What are the tax implications?  The automatic 
reinvestment of dividends and distributions does not 
relieve you of any income tax which may be payable (or 
required to be withheld) on such dividends and 
distributions.  In addition, the Plan Agent will reinvest 
dividends for foreign participants and for any participant 
subject to federal backup withholding after the deduction 
of the amounts required to be withheld.
Please note that, if you participate in the Plan 
through a brokerage account, you may not be able to 
continue as a participant if you transfer those shares to 
another broker.  Contact your broker or nominee or the Plan 
Agent to ascertain what is the best arrangement for you to 
participate in the Plan.


November 18, 2004

Dear Shareholders:
It is our pleasure on behalf of the Board of Directors to 
present the Annual Report for The 
Japan Equity Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") for the fiscal year 
ended October 31, 2004.
Performance and Review of the Japanese Stock Market (November 
2003 - October 2004)
As of the year ended October 31, 2004, the Tokyo Stock 
Exchange continued to recover 
from the 20-year low level in April 2003.  Advances in the 
stock market from the spring of 2003 
continued until spring 2004, then the market remained in a 
trading range roughly between 1050 and 
1200, as measured by the TOPIX Index ("TOPIX").
Stock market performance appeared to have reflected the 
underlying economy-Japan's real 
GDP growth rate turned positive in the third quarter of 2003 
and nominal GDP turned positive in the 
fourth quarter of 2003.  The surge in the TOPIX, from 788 in 
March 2003 to 1090 in June 2004 
coincided with the improvement in the real economy.  Steadily 
growing economies in the Americas, 
Europe and Asia also helped the performance of Japan's stock 
markets.  Positive factors overcame 
concerns in the market such as geopolitical uncertainty in 
the Middle East, rising oil prices and high 
metal prices.  The TOPIX has hovered around 1100 since May 
2004.
During the year ended October 31, 2004, shipping companies, 
tire makers and financial 
service companies were the top performing sectors, while 
security brokers, telecommunication and 
IT servicers and technology companies were the bottom 
performing sectors.  Strong performance of 
shipping companies and tire companies reflect favorable 
operating conditions.  Trade with China 
grew stronger over the period and, therefore, increased 
demand for ships to carry goods to and from 
China.  Shipping charges increased with this strong demand.  
Japanese tire makers also enjoyed 
positive operating conditions as tire demand for new cars and 
replacement vehicles stayed firm, 
while many finance companies enjoyed low interest rates and 
decreased personal bankruptcies.  
Meanwhile, securities brokers in Japan had a tough time 
despite the high level of securities trading 
volume because fast-growing internet-based securities brokers 
brought down commission charges 
drastically.  Telephone operators struggled with new entrants 
and saturation in the mobile telephone 
market in Japan.  Technology companies' share prices 
performed poorly, despite quite favorable 
operating conditions.  Market participants seemed to fear a 
peak-out in the underlying boom in 
electronic goods.  Mobile phones, digital still cameras and 
flat panel TVs were expected to drive the 
sector's growth.  They grew significantly until the summer of 
2004, but they have faced a demand 
slow-down and decline since then.
Examples of top performers and bottom performers among the 
major names in the TOPIX 
are as follows:  Sumitomo Rubber gained 65% over the year.  
Tire makers enjoyed good market 
conditions and, for Sumitomo Rubber, the introduction of a 
new golf club through one of its 
diversified businesses sold extremely well.  Kawasaki Kisen, 
a marine transportation company, 
returned 56% over the year, enjoying strong demand.  Sanyo 
Shinpan gained 55% and Credit Saison 
gained 43%, as these consumer finance companies benefited 
from low interest rates and decreased 
personal bankruptcies.  Mizuho Financial Group, a large 
banking and financial services company, 
gained 48% as sentiment towards banks improved.  On the other 
hand, the share price of NTT Data, 
Japan's largest computer service company, declined 44% over 
the year.  Severe competition hurt IT 
service companies.  NEC, a large maker of mobile phones, 
telecommunication equipment and a 
provider of computer services, lost 43% over the year.  
Nikon, a maker of cameras and 
semiconductor production equipment, lost 42% over the period.  
Nomura Holdings, Japan's largest 
securities brokerage company, lost 35% over the year as tough 
competition damaged the giant.  NTT 
Docomo, Japan's predominant mobile phone operator, lost 25% 
over the year as growth expectations 
for the company diminished and competition became tougher.
Performance/Attribution Analysis

	Table 1.  Performance in comparison with the benchmark 
(TOPIX), U.S. Dollar ("USD") 
base


Latest 12 Months 
(As of October 31, 2004) 
%


Japan Equity Fund (time weighted return)	
6.13
Benchmark (TOPIX)	
   6.60   
Difference	
-0.47

	Table 2.  Attribution Analysis Summary, Japanese Yen 
("JPY") base (Latest 12 Months)


Latest 12 Months 
(As of October 31, 2004) 
%
Portfolio (Equity Only)	
7.33
Benchmark (TOPIX)	
   4.03   
Difference	
3.30
Breakdown

Sector Selection	
-0.34
Stock Selection	
   3.64   
Total	
3.30

	Table 3.  Portfolio Return (Equity Only) vs. Benchmark 
Return, JPY base (monthly)



Portfolio 
Return 
(A) 
(%)
Benchmark 
Return 
(B) 
(%)
Relative 
Return 
(A) - (B) 
(%)
Sector 
Selection 
Effect 
(%)
Stock 
Selection 
Effect 
(%)
2003
November	
-3.46
-4.17
0.71
-0.18
0.77

December	
5.12
4.44
0.68
0.01
0.71
2004
January	
1.14
0.37
0.77
-0.01
0.74

February	
2.73
3.36
-0.63
-0.12
-0.63

March	
9.77
9.48
0.29
-0.36
0.67

April	
0.46
0.60
-0.14
0.19
-0.32

May	
-3.68
-3.90
0.22
-0.06
0.31

June	
4.89
4.43
0.46
0.09
0.45

July	
-4.78
-4.23
-0.55
0.06
-0.56

August	
-1.60
-0.84
-0.76
-0.09
-0.69

September	
-1.88
-2.06
0.18
0.18
0.02

October	
-1.79
-1.51
-0.28
-0.07
-0.24
Source:  Tokyo Stock Exchange

	Table 4.  Attribution Analysis Breakdown, JPY base 
(Latest 12 Months)


Portfolio 
Weight 
(%)
Benchmark 
Weight 
(%)
Portfolio 
Return 
(%)
Benchmark 
Return 
(%)
Sector 
Selection 
Effect 
(%)
Stock 
Selection 
Effect 
(%)

Technology	
17.43
15.13
-3.86
-6.35
-0.06
0.47
Automobile	
12.54
11.74
30.00
20.80
0.18
0.86
Machinery	
3.80
3.55
0.79
9.36
0.01
-0.29
Pharmaceutical	
4.74
4.46
31.93
23.86
-0.09
0.30
Personal Consumption	
7.22
7.31
7.44
5.55
0.02
0.14
Service	
2.94
3.59
6.65
2.81
0.01
0.16
Construction/Property	
3.51
3.92
11.21
3.71
-0.01
0.25
Metal/Glass	
6.52
5.46
6.98
12.12
-0.05
-0.27
Chemical/Textile	
7.86
6.90
1.83
6.86
0.00
-0.36
Wholesale/Transportation	
7.74
8.24
10.19
4.95
-0.05
0.44
Finance	
14.41
16.71
1.86
10.59
-0.28
-1.43
Telecom	
7.44
9.03
-4.80
-11.97
-0.02
0.81
Public Utility	
3.85
3.96
10.41
7.41
-0.02
0.12
Total	
100.00
100.00
6.06
5.14
-0.34
1.20

Comment
As shown in Table 1, the net asset value ("NAV") of the Fund 
increased by 6.13% in USD 
terms during the twelve months from November 1, 2003 to 
October 31, 2004.  Over the same period, 
the benchmark (TOPIX) gained 6.60% in USD terms.  The 
appreciation of the JPY against the USD 
was a positive factor for the absolute return in the NAV.
Table 2 shows that the performance of the equity portion of 
the portfolio, excluding 
expenses and some cash positions in JPY terms was 7.33%, in 
comparison with 4.03% for the 
benchmark, indicating out-performance on this basis.
Attribution Analysis Throughout the Period
(Stock Selection)

The attribution analysis indicates that stocks held in the 
Automobile (+0.86%), Telecom 
(+0.81%) and Technology sectors (+0.47%) helped the relative 
result.  On the other hand, stocks 
held in the Financial sector (-1.43%) adversely affected the 
relative return.  The overall stock 
selection effect (+1.20%) contributed positively to the 
portfolio.
(Sector Selection)

The attribution analysis also shows that an underweight in 
the Finance sector resulted in a 
negative contribution (-0.28%).  An overweight position in 
the Autos sector made a positive 
contribution (+0.18%) to the portfolio.
Outlook & Strategy
The Tokyo market appears to be in a consolidation phase since 
this summer, after the rally 
through mid-April.  The TOPIX has been hovering in a range 
between 1150 and 1050 since the 
summer, with limited volatility in the stock market.  We view 
that current adjustment in the market 
as a stage of the market to incorporate an inevitable down-
turn in some of the cyclical businesses like 
technology, machinery and materials.  As the market seems to 
factor-in potential negative news, we 
believe that the market will be well prepared to advance when 
this process is over.  It is very hard to 
see what time-frame the market will take from here, but the 
market has already been consolidating 
for six months, despite a healthy underlying economy.  The 
response by the market to future 
economic growth, we believe, could be quite quick because of 
long period of consolidation.  We 
believe the next advance stage, when it comes, will be quite 
different from the pattern of advance in 
2003 and 2004.  The rebound in the stock market so far was a 
response to the bottoming of the 
economy from quite a depressed state.  Financially weak 
companies and smaller companies fared 
well in this environment.  The next stage, we think, will be 
led by higher-quality companies with 
better balance sheets and sustainable growth characteristics.  
We will be modifying the portfolio 
gradually to be prepared for this stage.
Fund Performance
During the year ended October 31, 2004, the Fund's market 
price on the New York Stock 
Exchange ("NYSE") ranged from a low of $6.15 per share on 
December 18, 2003 to a high of $7.75 
on April 12, 2004.  The Fund's NYSE market price closed at 
$6.08 per share on October 31, 2004.
The NYSE trading price in relation to the Fund's net asset 
value per share, as measured by 
the weekly closing prices during the year ended October 31, 
2004, ranged from a discount of 5.89% 
on July 1, 2004 to a high premium of 22.90% on November 6, 
2003, and ended the period at a 
discount of 2.56%.
On December 23, 2003, the Fund successfully completed a 
rights offering resulting in the 
issuance of 3,605,229 new shares, representing proceeds to 
the Fund of approximately $19.4 million, 
after deducting expenses.
The Fund has not invested in derivative securities.  Although 
foreign currency hedging is 
permitted by the Fund's prospectus, the Fund has not engaged 
in any foreign currency hedging.
Portfolio Management
Mr. Koichi Ogawa, CFA, is the Executive Director and Chief 
Portfolio Manager of Daiwa 
SB Investments Ltd. ("DSBI") for all North American clients.  
A senior member of the Investment 
Policy Committee (IPC) of DSBI, Mr. Ogawa has 29 years of 
investment experience and has been 
responsible for Japan stock selection since 1984.  He spent 
nine years with Daiwa Securities as an 
institutional research analyst and three years in New York 
analyzing U.S. securities.  He graduated 
from Tohoku University with a B.A. in Law in 1972.
Mr. Atsuhiko Masuda, CFA is a Senior Portfolio Manager, with 
a total of 16 years of 
experience in the Japanese equity market.  He joined Daiwa in 
2003 after spending two years as a 
Senior Fund Manager for Invesco Asset Management.  From 1995 
to 2001 he was a Fund Manager 
for Deutsche Asset Management and from 1988 to 1993 he was an 
advisor in the Corporate Finance 
Division of Morgan Grenfell & Company.  In 1995 he earned an 
MBA from the Wharton School at 
the University of Pennsylvania and in 1988 he graduated from 
Keio University with a B.A. in 
Economics.  He assumed the day-to-day portfolio management 
responsibility for the Fund effective 
July 1, 2004.


We thank you for your support of The Japan Equity Fund, Inc. 
and your continued interest in 
the Japanese economy and marketplace.
Sincerely,
/s/ Hiroshi Kimura
/s/ Shunsuke Ichijo
HIROSHI KIMURA
SHUNSUKE ICHIJO
Chairman of the Board
President



Portfolio of Investments
October 31, 2004

COMMON STOCKS--98.01%


Shares

Value
Banks-7.93%


347
Mitsubishi Tokyo Financial Group Inc.	
$2,946,504
400
Mizuho Financial Group, Inc.	
1,543,542
150,000
The Bank of Yokohama, Ltd.	
897,254
300,000
The Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co., Ltd.	
1,749,222



Chemicals-8.26%

7,136,522
96,000
Asahi Organic Chemicals Industry Co., Ltd.	
278,064
275,000
Denki Kagaku Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha	
835,456
54,000
Kao Corp.	
1,245,684
92,000
Konica Minolta Holdings, Inc.	
1,227,361
63,000
Shin-Etsu Chemical Co., Ltd.	
2,395,415
300,000
Sumitomo Chemical Co., Ltd.	
1,454,854


7,436,834
Communications-6.71%


240
KDDI Corp.	
1,154,826
200
NTT Corp.	
849,137
1,480
NTT DoCoMo, Inc.	
2,611,190
56,000
Tokyo Broadcasting System, Inc.	
897,141
11,000
Trend Micro Inc.	
527,220


6,039,514
Construction-2.50%


56,000
Daiwa House Industry Co., Ltd.	
572,733
135,000
Maeda Corp.	
590,999
116,000
Obayashi Corp.	
623,832
110,000
Shimizu Corp.	
467,025


2,254,589
Electric Appliances-13.01%


32,000
Canon Inc.	
1,579,017
10,000
Hirose Electric Co., Ltd.	
991,603
60,000
Hitachi Ltd.	
377,583
6,200
Kyocera Corp.	
449,835
13,000
Mabuchi Motor Co., Ltd.	
965,280
191,000
Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.	
2,769,761
11,200
NEC Electronics Corp.	
547,372
10,000
Rohm Co., Ltd.	
1,026,512
108,000
Sharp Corp.	
1,491,763
500
Sumida Corp.	
12,053
7,500
TDK Corp.	
520,804
18,100
Tokyo Electron Ltd.	
981,932


11,713,515
Electric Power & Gas-3.75%


5,300
Electric Power Development Co., Ltd.	
$138,513
85,000
Tohoku Electric Power Co., Inc.	
1,450,750
79,000
Tokyo Electric Power Co., Inc.	
1,788,848


3,378,111
Foods-1.62%


43,000
Asahi Breweries, Ltd.	
443,023
88,000
Fuji Oil Co., Ltd.	
1,011,265


1,454,288
Glass & Ceramic Products-1.86%


96,000
NGK Spark Plug Co., Ltd.	
943,787
218,000
Nippon Sheet Glass Co., Ltd.	
734,277


1,678,064
Insurance-1.98%


192,000
Nissay Dowa General Insurance Co., Ltd.	
898,500
20,000
T&D Holdings Inc.	
883,102


1,781,602
Iron & Steel-1.73%


664,000
Nippon Steel Corp.	
1,553,656



Land Transportation-2.55%


275
East Japan Railway Co.	
1,445,184
105,000
Fukuyama Transporting Co., Ltd.	
419,049
90,000
Nippon Express Co., Ltd.	
433,909


2,298,142
Machinery-5.35%


51,400
Miura Co., Ltd.	
805,019
100,000
NSK Ltd.	
430,229
78,000
Ricoh Co., Ltd.	
1,457,119
15,000
SMC Corp.	
1,606,284
65,000
Toyoda Machine Works, Ltd.	
513,916


4,812,567
Marine Transportation-1.23%


220,000
Nippon Yusen Kabushiki Kaisha	
1,106,331



Non-Ferrous Metals-2.80%


139,000
Mitsui Mining & Smelting Co., Ltd.	
549,495
162,000
Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd.	
1,536,088
65,000
Sumitomo Metal Mining Co., Ltd.	
438,485


2,524,068
Other Financing Business-2.52%


53,000
Hitachi Capital Corp.	
865,582
12,000
Orix Corp.	
1,407,303


2,272,885
Other Products-2.31%


48,300
Bandai Co., Ltd.	
1,057,232
9,100
Nintendo Co., Ltd.	
1,026,852


2,084,084
Pharmaceutical-4.63%


33,300
Eisai Co., Ltd.	
$958,251
40,000
Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.	
1,932,258
36,000
Tanabe Seiyaku Co., Ltd.	
327,087
26,000
Yamanouchi Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.	
954,241


4,171,837
Precision Instruments-1.11%


40,000
Terumo Corp.	
996,320
Pulp & Paper-0.80%


162
Nippon Paper Group Inc.	
719,898
Real Estate-0.94%


80,000
Mitsui Fudosan Co., Ltd.	
849,137
Retail Trade-5.45%


13,300
Fast Retailing Co., Ltd.	
845,759
55,000
Isetan Co., Ltd.	
560,430
12,000
Ito-Yokado Co., Ltd.	
430,229
45,000
Marui Co., Ltd.	
564,251
37,000
Seven-Eleven Japan Co., Ltd.	
1,071,705
6,000
Shimamura Co., Ltd.	
439,853
36,900
Sundrug Co., Ltd.	
993,957


4,906,184
Rubber Products-1.55%


24,000
Bridgestone Corp.	
434,758
270,000
Yokahama Rubber Co., Ltd.	
960,374


1,395,132
Securities-1.73%


127,000
Nomura Holdings Inc.	
1,557,694
Services-1.15%


6,000
Nomura Research Institute, Ltd.	
524,200
14,000
Secom Co., Ltd.	
508,539


1,032,739
Transportation Equipment-10.75%


36,000
Denso Corp.	
862,723
55,000
Honda Motor Co., Ltd.	
2,656,854
43,000
Showa Corp.	
568,384
55,000
Tokai Rika Co., Ltd.	
953,769
119,000
Toyota Motor Corp.	
4,636,947


9,678,677
Wholesale Trade-3.79%


129,000
Mitsui & Co., Ltd.	
1,084,432
332
Net One Systems Co., Ltd.	
1,265,478
143,000
Sumitomo Corp.	
1,064,506


3,414,416



Total Common Stocks



(Cost-$82,931,260)	
88,246,806




SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS--0.01%
Principal
Amount
(000)

Value
U.S. DOLLAR TIME DEPOSIT-0.01%



$8	Bank of New York Time Deposit, 0.05% due 11/1/04 
(Cost-$8,109)	

$8,109
Total Investments-98.02%



(Cost-$82,939,370)	
88,254,915
Other assets less liabilities-1.98%	
1,784,972
NET ASSETS (Applicable to 14,420,917 shares of capital stock 
outstanding; equivalent to $6.24 per share)-100.00%	

$90,039,887

See accompanying notes to financial statements.


TEN LARGEST EQUITY
POSITIONS HELD
October 31, 2004

Issue
Percent of 
Net Assets
Toyota Motor Corp.	
5.15%
Mitsubishi Tokyo Financial Group Inc.	
3.27
Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.	
3.08
Honda Motor Co., Ltd.	
2.95
NTT DoCoMo, Inc.	
2.90
Shin-Etsu Chemical Co., Ltd.	
2.66
Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.	
2.15
Tokyo Electric Power Co., Inc. 	
.99
The Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co., Ltd.	
1.94
SMC Corp.	
1.78





EQUITY 
CLASSIFICATIONS HELD 
October 31, 2004
Industry
Percent of 
Net Assets
Electric Appliances	
13.01%
Transportation Equipment	
10.75
Chemicals	
8.26
Banks	
7.93
Communication	
6.71
Retail Trade	
5.45
Machinery	
5.35
Pharmaceutical	
4.63
Wholesale Trade	
3.79
Electric Power & Gas	
3.75
Non-Ferrous Metals	
2.80
Land Transportation	
2.55
Other Financing Business	
2.52
Construction	
2.50
Other Products	
2.31
Insurance	
1.98
Glass & Ceramic Products	
1.86
Securities	
1.73
Iron & Steel	
1.73
Foods	
1.62
Rubber Products	
1.55
Marine Transportation	
1.23
Services	
1.15
Precision Instruments	
1.11
Real Estate	
0.94
Pulp & Paper	
0.80



Statement of Assets and Liabilities
October 31, 2004
Assets

Investment in securities, at value (cost-$82,939,370)	
$88,254,915
Cash denominated in foreign currency (cost-$1,879,070)	
1,895,985
Receivable for securities sold	
547,467
Interest and dividends receivable	
363,651
Prepaid expenses	
39,192
Total assets	
91,101,210
Liabilities

Payable for securities purchased	
921,401
Accrued expenses and other liabilities	
139,922
Total liabilities	
1,061,323
Net Assets

Capital stock, $0.01 par value per share; total 30,000,000 
shares authorized; 
14,420,917 shares issued and outstanding	
144,209
Paid-in capital in excess of par value	
126,488,135
Accumulated net realized loss on investments	
(41,939,851)
Net unrealized appreciation on investments and other assets 
and liabilities 
denominated in foreign currency	
5,347,394
Net assets applicable to shares outstanding	
$90,039,887
Net Asset Value Per Share	
$6.24


See accompanying notes to financial statements.

Statement of Operations
For the Year Ended October 31, 2004
Investment Income:

Dividends (net of withholding taxes of $69,077)	
$915,720
Interest	
188
Total investment income	
915,908
Expenses:

Investment management fee	
312,745
Administration fee and expenses	
163,908
Custodian fees and expenses	
139,102
Audit and tax services	
79,950
Reports and notices to shareholders	
64,634
Legal fees and expenses	
60,414
Insurance expense	
47,885
Directors' fees and expenses	
29,350
Transfer agency fee and expenses	
15,003
Other	
51,010
Total expenses	
964,001
Net Investment Loss	
(48,093)
Realized and unrealized gains from investment activities and 
foreign currency 
transactions:

Net realized gains on investments	
6,197,993
Net realized foreign currency transaction losses	
(92,782)
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on 
investments in equity 
securities	
(393,278)
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on 
assets and liabilities 
denominated in foreign currency	
31,761
Net realized and unrealized gains from investment activities 
and foreign currency 
transactions	
5,743,694
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations	
$5,695,601


See accompanying notes to financial statements.



Statement of Changes in Net Assets

For the Years Ended 
October 31,

2004
2003
Increase (decrease) in net assets from operations:


Net investment loss	
$(48,093)
$(253,257)
Net realized gain (loss) on:


Investments	
6,197,993
(5,224,636)
Foreign currency transactions	
(92,782)
209,459
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:


Investments in equity securities	
(393,278)
21,082,931
Translation of short-term investments and other assets and 
liabilities denominated in foreign currency	
31,761
(2,396)
Net increase in net assets resulting from operations	
5,695,601
15,812,101
From capital stock transactions:


Sale of capital stock resulting from:


Net proceeds from the sale of common shares pursuant to 
rights offering	
19,425,914
-
Net increase in net assets	
25,121,515
15,812,101
Net assets:


Beginning of year	
64,918,372
49,106,271
End of year	
$90,039,887
$64,918,372


See accompanying notes to financial statements.


Notes To Financial Statements

Organization And Significant Accounting Policies

The Japan Equity Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") was incorporated in 
Maryland on July 12, 1990 
under its former name "The Japan Emerging Equity Fund, Inc." 
and commenced operations on July 
24, 1992.  It is registered with the Securities and Exchange 
Commission as a closed-end, diversified 
management investment company.
The following significant accounting policies are in 
conformity with generally accepted 
accounting principles in the United States of America for 
investment companies.  Such policies are 
consistently followed by the Fund in the preparation of its 
financial statements.  The preparation of 
financial statements in accordance with accounting principles 
generally accepted in the United States 
of America requires management to make estimates and 
assumptions that affect the amounts and 
disclosures in the financial statements.  Actual reporting 
results could differ from those estimates.
Valuation Of Investments-Securities which are listed on the 
Tokyo Stock Exchange or 
listed on the over-the-counter market in Japan or listed on 
other exchanges in Japan and for which 
market quotations are readily available are valued at the 
last reported sales price available to the 
Fund at the close of business on the day the securities are 
being valued or, lacking any such sales, at 
the last available bid price.  In instances where quotations 
are not readily available or where the price 
as determined by the above procedures is deemed not to 
represent fair market value, fair value will 
be determined in such manner as the Board of Directors (the 
"Board") may prescribe.   Short-term 
investments having a maturity of 60 days or less are valued 
at amortized cost, except where the 
Board determines that such valuation does not represent the 
fair value of the investment.  All other 
securities and assets are valued at fair value as determined 
in good faith by, or under the direction of, 
the Board.
Foreign Currency Translation-The books and records of the 
Fund are maintained in U.S. 
dollars as follows:  (1) the foreign currency market value of 
investment securities and other assets 
and liabilities stated in Japanese yen are translated at the 
exchange rates prevailing at the end of the 
period; and (2) purchases, sales, income and expenses are 
translated at the rate of exchange 
prevailing on the respective dates of such transactions.  The 
resulting exchange gains and losses are 
included in the Statement of Operations.  The Fund does not 
isolate the effect of fluctuations in 
foreign exchange rates from the effect of fluctuations in the 
market price of securities.
Tax Status-The Fund intends to continue to distribute 
substantially all of its taxable income 
and to comply with the minimum distribution and other 
requirements of the Internal Revenue Code 
applicable to regulated investment companies.  Accordingly, 
no provision for federal income or 
excise taxes is required.
The Fund is not subject to any Japanese income, capital gains 
or other taxes except for 
withholding taxes on certain income, generally imposed at 
rates of 10% on interest and dividends, 
paid to the Fund by Japanese corporations.
Investment Transactions And Investment Income-Investment 
transactions are recorded on 
the trade date (the date upon which the order to buy or sell 
is executed).  Realized and unrealized 
gains and losses from security and foreign currency 
transactions are calculated on the identified cost 
basis.  Dividend income and corporate actions are recorded 
generally on the ex-date, except for 
certain dividends and corporate actions from Japanese 
securities which may be recorded after the ex-
date, as soon as the Fund acquires information regarding such 
dividends or corporate actions.  
Interest income is recorded on an accrual basis.
Dividends and Distributions to Shareholders-The Fund records 
dividends and distributions 
payable to its shareholders on the ex-dividend date.  The 
amount of dividends and distributions from 
net investment income and net realized capital gains are 
determined in accordance with federal 
income tax regulations, which may differ from generally 
accepted accounting principles.  These 
book basis/tax basis differences are either considered 
temporary or permanent in nature.  To the 
extent these differences are permanent in nature, such 
amounts are reclassified within the capital 
accounts based on their federal tax basis treatment; 
temporary differences do not require 
reclassifications.  Dividends and distributions which exceed 
net investment income and net realized 
capital gains for tax purposes are reported as distributions 
of paid-in-capital.
Investment Manager And Investment Adviser
The Fund has an Investment Management Agreement with Daiwa SB 
Investments (U.S.A.) 
Ltd. (the "Manager").  Daiwa SB Investments Ltd. ("DSBI" or 
the "Adviser"), an affiliate of the 
Manager, acts as the Fund's investment adviser pursuant to an 
Investment Advisory Agreement 
between the Manager and DSBI.  For such investment services, 
the Fund is obligated to pay the 
Manager a monthly fee at an annual rate of 0.60% of the first 
$20 million, 0.40% of the next $30 
million and 0.20% of the excess over $50 million of the 
Fund's average weekly net assets, of which 
fee 60% is paid by the Manager to DSBI.  In addition, the 
Fund has agreed to reimburse the Manager 
and the Adviser for all out-of-pocket expenses related to the 
Fund.  For the year ended October 31, 
2004, there were no out-of-pocket expenses incurred by the 
Manager or the Adviser.
At October 31, 2004, the Fund owed $27,026 to the Manager.
Brokerage commissions of $42,387 were paid by the Fund to 
Daiwa Securities America, 
Inc., an affiliate of both the Manager and DSBI, in 
connection with portfolio transactions during the 
year ended October 31, 2004.
Administrator And Custodian And Other Related Parties
Daiwa Securities Trust Company ("DSTC"), an affiliate of the 
Adviser, provides certain 
administrative services to the Fund, for which the Fund pays 
to DSTC a monthly fee at an annual 
rate of 0.20% of the first $60 million of the Fund's average 
weekly net assets, 0.15% of the next $40 
million and 0.10% of the excess over $100 million, with a 
minimum annual fee of $120,000.  In 
addition, as permitted by the Administration Agreement, the 
Fund reimburses the Administrator for 
its out-of-pocket expenses related to the Fund.  For the year 
ended October 31, 2004, expenses of 
$4,350 were paid to the Administrator, representing 
reimbursement to the Administrator of costs 
relating to the attendance by its employees at meetings of 
the Fund's Board.
DSTC also acts as custodian for the Fund's assets and has 
appointed Sumitomo Mitsui 
Banking Corporation (the "Sub-Custodian"), an affiliate of 
the Manager, to act as the sub-custodian 
for all of the cash and securities of the Fund held in Japan.  
As compensation for its services as 
custodian, DSTC receives a monthly fee and reimbursement of 
out-of-pocket expenses.  Such 
expenses include fees and out-of-pocket expenses of the Sub-
Custodian.  During the year ended 
October 31, 2004, DSTC and the Sub-Custodian earned $47,307 
and $91,795, respectively, as 
compensation for custodial service to the Fund.
At October 31, 2004, the Fund owed $13,917 and $3,957 to DSTC 
for administration and 
custodian fees, respectively, excluding fees and expenses of 
$6,973 payable to the Sub-Custodian.
During the year ended October 31, 2004, the Fund paid or 
accrued $60,374 for legal services 
in connection with the Fund's on-going operations to a law 
firm of which the Fund's Assistant 
Secretary is a partner.
Investments In Securities And Federal Income Tax Matters
For federal income tax purposes, the cost of securities owned 
at October 31, 2004 was 
$83,019,154.  At October 31, 2004, the net unrealized 
appreciation of investments for federal income 
tax purposes, excluding short-term securities, of $5,227,652 
was composed of gross appreciation of 
$7,954,629 for those investments having an excess of value 
over cost, and gross depreciation of 
$2,726,977 for those investments having an excess of cost 
over value.  For the year ended October 
31, 2004, total aggregate purchases and sales of portfolio 
securities, excluding short-term securities, 
were $95,078,671 and $75,519,346, respectively.
In order to present undistributed net investment income and 
accumulated net realized loss on 
investments on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities that 
more closely represent their tax character, 
certain adjustments have been made to paid-in capital in 
excess of par value, undistributed net 
investment income and accumulated net realized loss on 
investments.
For the year ended October 31, 2004, the adjustments were to 
decrease net investment loss 
by $48,093, decrease accumulated net realized loss on 
investments by $92,782 and decrease paid-in 
capital in excess of par by $140,875, primarily relating to 
the Fund's net operating loss for the year 
ended October 31, 2004 and the reclassification of realized 
foreign currency losses.  Net investment 
income, net realized losses and net assets were not affected 
by this change.
During the current year, the Fund utilized capital loss 
carryforwards of $6,285,887.
At October 31, 2004, the Fund had a remaining capital loss 
carryover of $41,851,957, of 
which $16,888,593 expires in the year 2006, $6,225,150 
expires in the year 2009, $13,474,882 
expires in the year 2010 and $5,263,332 expires in the year 
2011 available to offset future net capital 
gains.
As of October 31, 2004, the Fund had no distributable 
earnings.
Capital Stock
There are 30,000,000 shares of $.01 par value common stock 
authorized.  Of the 14,420,917 
shares of the Fund outstanding at October 31, 2004, Daiwa 
Securities America Inc., an affiliate of 
the Manager, Adviser and DSTC, owns 14,532 shares.
The Fund issued 3,605,229 shares on December 23, 2003 in 
connection with a rights 
offering of the Fund's shares, the proceeds of which, net of 
fees and expenses, were approximately 
$19.4 million.  Shareholders of record on December 4, 2003 
were issued one transferable right for 
each share of common stock owned, entitling shareholders to 
acquire one newly-issued share of 
common stock for every three rights held at a subscription 
price of $5.68, which was determined on 
December 23, 2003.  Offering costs of approximately $414,000 
($0.03 per share), including 
$100,000 paid to DSA, as reimbursement for its expenses 
incurred in acting as dealer manager, were 
charged to paid-in capital in excess of par value upon 
completion of the offering.  Dealer manager 
and soliciting fees of $637,580 ($0.04 per share) were netted 
against the proceeds of the 
subscription.  DSA earned approximately $255,971 of the 
aforementioned fees with respect to its 
participation in the offering.

Financial Highlights
Selected data for a share of capital stock outstanding during 
each year is presented below:


For the Years Ended October 31,

2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
Net asset value, beginning of year	
$	6.00
$	4.54
$	5.59
$	8.35
$	9.39






Net investment loss	
(-)*
(0.02)
(0.04)
(0.04)
(0.04)
Net realized and unrealized gains 
(losses) on investments and foreign 
currency transactions	
0.39
1.48
(1.01)
(2.72)
(1.00)






Net increase (decrease) in net asset 
value resulting from operations	
0.39
1.46
(1.05)
(2.76)
(1.04)






Dilutive effect of rights offering	
(0.12)
-
-
-
-
Offering costs charged to paid-in 
capital in excess of par value	
(0.03)
-
-
-
-






Net asset value, end of year	
$	6.24
$	6.00
$	4.54
$	5.59
$	8.35






Per share market value, end of year	
$	6.080
$	7.160
$	4.150
$	4.990
$	7.063






Total investment return:





Based on market price at beginning 
and end of year+	
(11.70)%
72.53%
(16.83)%
(29.35)%
(28.02)%
Based on net asset value at beginning 
and end of year+	
5.74%
32.16%
(18.78)%
(33.05)%
(11.08)%
Ratios and supplemental data:





Net assets, end of year 
(in millions)	
$	90.0
$	64.9
$	49.1
$	60.5
$	90.3
Ratios to average net assets of:





Expenses	
1.12%
1.50%
1.44%
1.12%
0.96%
Net investment loss	
(0.06)%
(0.48)%
(0.74)%
(0.51)%
(0.48)%
Portfolio turnover	
90.03%
84.00%
76.19%
63.39%
61.91%






________________________





*	Represents less than $0.005 per share.
+	For the year ended October 31, 2004, the total 
investment return includes the benefit of shares 
resulting from the exercise of rights.



Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
To the Shareholders and 
Board of Directors of 
The Japan Equity Fund, Inc.
In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and 
liabilities, including the portfolio 
of investments, and the related statements of operations and 
of changes in net assets and the financial 
highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the 
financial position of The Japan Equity Fund, 
Inc. (the "Fund") at October 31, 2004, the results of its 
operations for the year then ended, the 
changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the 
period then ended and the financial 
highlights for each of the five years in the period then 
ended, in conformity with accounting 
principles generally accepted in the United States of 
America.  These financial statements and 
financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial 
statements") are the responsibility of the 
Fund's management; our responsibility is to express an 
opinion on these financial statements based 
on our audits.  We conducted our audits of these financial 
statements in accordance with the 
standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board 
(United States).  Those standards 
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
reasonable assurance about whether the financial 
statements are free of material misstatement.  An audit 
includes examining, on a test basis, evidence 
supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial 
statements, assessing the accounting 
principles used and significant estimates made by management, 
and evaluating the overall financial 
statement presentation.  We believe that our audits, which 
included confirmation of securities at 
October 31, 2004 by correspondence with the custodian and 
brokers, provide a reasonable basis for 
our opinion.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP 
300 Madison Avenue 
New York, New York 10017 
December 22, 2004



Tax Information (Unaudited)
The Fund is required by Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue 
Code of 1986, as amended, 
to advise you within 60 days of the Fund's fiscal year end 
(October 31, 2004) as to the federal tax 
status of distributions received by you during such fiscal 
year.  There were no dividend payments or 
foreign tax credits with respect to the fiscal year 2004.
Shareholders are strongly advised to consult their own tax 
advisers with respect to the tax 
consequences of their investment in the Fund.



Information Concerning Directors and Officers (Unaudited)
The following table sets forth information concerning each of 
the Directors and Officers of 
the Fund.  The Directors of the Fund will serve for terms 
expiring on the date of subsequent Annual 
Meetings of Stockholders in the year 2006 for Class I 
Directors, 2007 for Class II Directors and 2005 
for Class III Directors, or until their successors are duly 
elected and qualified.

Name (Age) and Address  
of Directors/Officers
Principal Occupation  
or Employment During Past  
Five Years and  
Directorships in  
Publicly Held Companies
Director or  
Officer of  
Fund Since
Number of  
Funds in  
Fund  
Complex for  
Which  
Director  
Serves (1)
Directors



Austin C. Dowling (72)
1002 E Long Beach Boulevard
North Beach, NJ 08008
Retired; Director, The Thai Capital Fund, Inc., since 1990; 
Director, 
The Singapore Fund, Inc., since 2000.
Class III 
Director  
since 1992
3
Martin J. Gruber (67)
229 South Irving Street
Ridgewood, NJ 07450
Professor of Finance, Leonard N. Stern School of Business, 
New 
York University, since 1965; Director, The Thai Capital Fund, 
Inc., 
since 2000; Director, The Singapore Fund, Inc., since 2000; 
Trustee, 
Scudder New York Mutual Funds, since 1992; Trustee, C.R.E.F., 
since 2001 and Chairman from December 2003; Trustee, 
T.I.A.A., 
from 1996 to 2000.
Class I 
Director  
since 1992
3
David G. Harmer (61)
4337 Bobwhite Court
Ogden, UT 84403
Executive Director, Department of Community and Economic 
Development for the State of Utah since May 2002; Chairman, 
2K2 
Hosting Corporation, from April 2001 to April 2002; 
President, 
Jetway Systems, a division of FMC Corporation, from 1997 
until 
2001; Director, The Thai Capital Fund, Inc., since 2000; 
Director, 
The Singapore Fund, Inc., since 1996.
Class II 
Director  
since 1997
3
*	Hiroshi Kimura (51)
One Evertrust Plaza
Jersey City, NJ 07302-3051
Chairman and President, Daiwa Securities Trust Company, since 
July 
2001; Director and Senior Vice President of Daiwa Securities 
Trust 
Company, from April 1999 to June 2001; Associate Director, 
Daiwa 
Europe Bank, from April 1996 to March 1999.
Chairman of 
the Board and 
Class I 
Director  
since 2001
1
Oren G. Shaffer (62)
1801 California Street
Denver, CO 80202
Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer, Qwest 
Communications 
International Inc., since July 2002; Executive Vice President 
and 
Chief Financial Officer, Ameritech Corporation, from 1994 to 
2000; 
Director, The Thai Capital Fund, Inc., since 2000; Director, 
The 
Singapore Fund, Inc., since 1997.
Class II 
Director  
since 2000
3




Name (Age) and 
Address  
of 
Directors/Office
rs
Principal Occupation  
or Employment During Past  
Five Years and  
Directorships in  
Publicly Held Companies
Direct
or or  
Office
r of  
Fund 
Since
Number 
of  
Funds 
in  
Fund  
Comple
x for  
Which  
Direct
or  
Serves 
(1)
Officers



Shunsuke 
Ichijo (51)
7-9, 
Nihonbashi 2-
chome,
Chuo-ku, Tokyo 
103-0027
Japan
Chief Executive Officer and 
Director, Daiwa SB Investments 
since 1999; General Manager, 
International Division of 
DICAM Tokyo since 1996.
Presid
ent of 
the 
Fund  
since 
2000
-
John J. 
O'Keefe (45)
One Evertrust 
Plaza
Jersey City, 
NJ 07302-3051
Vice President and Treasurer, 
The Thai Capital Fund, Inc. 
and The Singapore Fund, Inc., 
since 2000; Vice President, 
Fund Accounting Department of 
Daiwa Securities Trust 
Company, since 2000; Assistant 
Controller, Reserve Management 
Corporation, from 1999 to 
2000; Accounting Manager, 
Prudential Investments, from 
1998 to 1999; and Assistant 
Vice President, Daiwa 
Securities Trust Company from 
1990 to 1998.
Vice 
Presid
ent 
and 
Treasu
rer of 
the 
Fund  
since 
2000
-
Yuko Uchida 
(26)
One Evertrust 
Plaza
Jersey City, 
NJ 07302-3051
Secretary, The Thai Capital 
Fund, Inc. and The Singapore 
Fund, Inc., since 2004; Client 
Reporting Department of Daiwa 
Securities Trust Company, 
since 2002.
Secret
ary of 
the 
Fund  
since 
2004
-
Leonard B. 
Mackey, Jr. 
(53)
31 West 52nd 
Street
New York, NY 
10019-6131
Partner in the law firm of 
Clifford Chance US LLP, since 
1983; Assistant Secretary, The 
Thai Capital Fund, Inc. and 
The Singapore Fund, Inc., 
since 2004.
Assist
ant 
Secret
ary of 
the 
Fund  
since 
2004
-
Anthony 
Cambria (50)
One Evertrust 
Plaza
Jersey City, 
NJ 07302-3051
Chief Compliance Officer, the 
Thai Capital Fund, Inc. and 
The Singapore Fund, Inc., 
since 2004; Director and 
Executive Vice President, 
Daiwa Securities Trust 
Company, since 1999.
Chief 
Compli
ance 
Office
r of 
the 
Fund 
since 
2004
-
	
1	"Fund Complex" includes the Fund, The Thai Capital Fund, 
Inc., The Singapore Fund, Inc. and other investment 
companies advised by SCB Asset Management Co., Ltd., Daiwa 
SB Investments (H.K.) Ltd., DBS Asset Management (United 
States) Pte. Ltd., Daiwa SB Investments (Singapore) Ltd., 
Daiwa SB Investments (USA) Ltd., Daiwa SB Investments Ltd. 
or their respective affiliates.
*	Directors so noted are deemed by the Fund's counsel to 
be 
"interested persons" (as defined in the U.S. Investment 
Company Act of 1940, as amended).  Mr. Kimura is deemed an 
interested person of the Fund because of his affiliation 
with Daiwa Securities Trust Company, an affiliate of the 
Fund's investment adviser, Daiwa SB Investments Ltd.





BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Hiroshi Kimura, Chairman
Austin C. Dowling
Martin J. Gruber
David G. Harmer
Oren G. Shaffer
OFFICERS
Shunsuke Ichijo
President
John J. O'Keefe
Vice President and Treasurer
Yuko Uchida
Secretary
Leonard B. Mackey, Jr.
Assistant Secretary
Anthony Cambria
Chief Compliance Officer
ADDRESS OF THE FUND
c/o Daiwa Securities Trust 
Company
One Evertrust Plaza, 9th 
Floor
Jersey City, NJ 07302-3051
INVESTMENT MANAGER
Daiwa SB Investments 
(U.S.A.) Ltd.
INVESTMENT ADVISER
Daiwa SB Investments Ltd.
ADMINISTRATOR AND CUSTODIAN
Daiwa Securities Trust 
Company
TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR
EquiServe Trust Company, 
N.A.
LEGAL COUNSEL
Clifford Chance US LLP
INDEPENDENT REGISTERED 
PUBLIC
ACCOUNTING FIRM
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Notice is hereby given in 
accordance with Section 
23(c) of the Investment 
Company Act of 1940 that 
from time to time the Fund 
may purchase shares of its 
common stock in the open 
market at prevailing market 
prices.
This report is sent to 
shareholders of the Fund for 
their information.  It is 
not a prospectus, circular 
or representation intended 
for use in the purchase or 
sale of shares of the Fund 
or of any securities 
mentioned in the report.



Annual Report 
October 31, 2004

JAPAN EQUITY FUND LOGO


The Japan Equity Fund, Inc.
c/o Daiwa Securities Trust 
Company 
One Evertrust Plaza 
Jersey City, New Jersey  
07302
INVESTMENT MANAGER
Daiwa SB Investments 
(U.S.A.) Ltd.
INVESTMENT ADVISOR
Daiwa SB Investments Ltd.




Item 2.  Code of Ethics.
(a)	The registrant has adopted a code of ethics (the "Code 
of Ethics") that applies to the registrant's principal 
executive officer and principal financial and accounting 
officer.  A copy of the registrant's Code of Ethics is 
attached hereto as Exhibit 11(a).
(b)	No information need be disclosed pursuant to this 
paragraph.
(c)	The registrant has not amended the Code of Ethics during 
the period covered by the shareholder report presented 
in Item 1 hereto.
(d)	The registrant has not granted a waiver or an implicit 
waiver from a provision of its Code of Ethics.
(e)	Not applicable.
(f)	(1)	The Code of Ethics is attached hereto as Exhibit 
11(a).
(2)	Not applicable.
(3)	Not applicable.
Item 3.  Audit Committee Financial Expert.
The registrant's board of directors has determined that 
the registrant has at least one audit committee financial 
expert serving on its audit committee.  The audit committee 
financial expert is Oren G. Shaffer who is "independent" for 
purposes of this item.
Item 4.  Principal Accountant Fees and Services.
(a)(b)(c)(d) and (g).  Based on fees billed for the 
periods shown:

2004




Registrant
Covered 
Entities(1)

Audit Fees	
(2)$96,750
N/A





Non-Audit Fees



Audit-Related Fees	



Tax Fees	
(3) $8,400


All Other Fees	



Total Non-Audit Fees	
$8,400






Total	
$105,150






2003




Registrant
Covered 
Entities(1)

Audit Fees	
$64,200
N/A





Non-Audit Fees



Audit-Related Fees	



Tax Fees	
(3) $7,650


All Other Fees



Total Non-Audit Fees	
$7,650






Total	
$71,850





_____________________
N/A- Not applicable, as not required by Item 4.

(1)	"Covered Entities" include the registrant's investment 
adviser (excluding any sub-adviser whose role is 
primarily portfolio management and is subcontracted with 
or overseen by another investment adviser) and any entity 
controlling, controlled by or under common control with 
the registrant's adviser that provides ongoing services 
to the registrant.
(2)	Audit Fees for 2004 include $30,000 representing 
procedures performed in connection with the December 2003 
rights offering of the Fund.
(3)	Tax Fees represent fees received for tax compliance 
services provided to the registrant, including the review 
of tax returns.

(e)	(1)	Before the registrant's principal accountant is 
engaged to render audit or non-audit services to 
the registrant and non-audit services to the 
registrant's investment adviser and its affiliates, 
each engagement is approved by the registrant's 
audit committee.
(e)	(2)	100% of the services described in each of (b) 
through (d) of this Item 4 were approved by the 
registrant's audit committee pursuant to paragraph 
(c)(7)(i)(C) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X.
(f)	Not applicable.
(g)	See table above.
(h)	The registrant's audit committee of the board of 
directors has considered whether the provision of non-
audit services that were rendered to Covered Entities 
that were not pre-approved pursuant to paragraph 
(C)(7)(ii) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X is compatible 
with maintaining the auditors' independence in 
performing audit services.
Item 5.  Audit Committee of Listed Registrants.
The registrant has a separately-designated standing 
audit committee established in accordance with Section 
3(a)(58)(A) of the Exchange Act.  The members of the audit 
committee are as follows:  Austin C. Dowling, Martin J. 
Gruber, David G. Harmer and Oren G. Shaffer.
Item 6.  Schedule of Investments.
A Schedule of Investments is included as part of the 
report to shareholders filed under Item 1.
Item 7.  Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures 
for Closed-End Management Investment Companies.
The registrant has delegated to its investment adviser 
the voting of proxies relating to the registrant's portfolio 
securities.  The registrant's policies and procedures and 
those used by the investment adviser to determine how to vote 
proxies relating to the registrant's portfolio securities, 
including the procedures used when a vote presents a conflict 
of interest involving the investment adviser or any of its 
affiliates, are contained in the investment adviser's Proxy 
Voting Guidelines, which are attached hereto as Exhibit 
11(c).
Item 8.  Purchase of Equity Securities by Closed-End 
Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers.
REGISTRANT PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES
Period
(a)
Total 
Number of 
Shares 
(or 
Units) 
Purchased
(b)
Average 
Price 
Paid per 
Share 
(or 
Unit)
(c)
Total Number 
of Shares 
(or Units) 
Purchased as 
Part of 
Publicity 
Announced 
Plans or 
Programs
(d)
Maximum Number 
(or Approximate 
Dollar Value) of 
Shares (or Units) 
that may yet be 
Purchased Under 
the Plans or 
Programs
November

0
N/A
0
0
December

0
N/A
0
0
January

0
N/A
0
0
February

0
N/A
0
0
March

0
N/A
0
0
April

0
N/A
0
0
May

0
N/A
0
0
June

0
N/A
0
0
July

0
N/A
0
0
August

0
N/A
0
0
September

0
N/A
0
0
October

0
N/A
0
0
Total

0
N/A
0
0

Item 9.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.
There have been no material changes to the procedures by 
which shareholders may recommend nominees to the registrant's 
board of directors.
Item 10.  Controls and Procedures.
(a)	Based on an evaluation of the registrant's disclosure 
controls and procedures as of December 14, 2004, the 
disclosure controls and procedures are reasonably 
designed to ensure that the information required in 
filings on Forms N-CSR is recorded, processed, 
summarized, and reported on a timely basis.
(b)	There were no significant changes in the registrant's 
internal controls or in other factors that could affect 
these controls subsequent to the date of our evaluation, 
including any corrective actions with regard to 
significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.
Item 11.  Exhibits.
(a)	Code of Ethics for Principal Executive and Senior 
Financial Officers.
(b)	Certifications required by Rule 30a-2(a) of the 
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and Section 
906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 are attached 
hereto.
(c)	Proxy Voting Guidelines for the registrant and its 
adviser.


SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange 
Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the 
registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its 
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
The Japan Equity Fund, Inc.
By	\s\ John J. O'Keefe
-------------------------------
----
John J. O'Keefe, Vice President 
& Treasurer
Date:  January 6, 2005
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange 
Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this 
report has been signed below by the following persons on 
behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the 
dates indicated.
By  	\s\ John J. O'Keefe
-------------------------------
----
John J. O'Keefe, Vice President 
& Treasurer
Date:  January 6, 2005
By  	\s\ Hiroshi Kimura
-------------------------------
----
Hiroshi Kimura, Chairman
Date:  January 6, 2005



EXHIBIT 11 (a)
CODE OF ETHICS FOR PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE AND SENIOR FINANCIAL 
OFFICERS
I.	This Code of Ethics (the "Code") for The Thai Capital 
Fund, Inc., The Japan Equity Fund, Inc. and The 
Singapore Fund, Inc. (each a "Fund" and collectively the 
"Funds") applies to each Fund's President and Treasurer 
(or persons performing similar functions) ("Covered 
Officers") for the purpose of promoting:
?	honest and ethical conduct, including the ethical 
handling of actual or apparent conflicts of 
interest between personal and professional 
relationships;
?	full, fair, accurate, timely and understandable 
disclosure in reports and documents that a Fund 
files with, or submits to, the Securities and 
Exchange Commission ("SEC") and in other public 
communications made by a Fund;
?	compliance with applicable laws and governmental 
rules and regulations;
?	prompt internal reporting of violations of the Code 
to an appropriate person or persons identified in 
the Code; and
?	accountability for adherence to the Code.
Each Covered Officer should adhere to a high standard of 
business ethics and should be sensitive to situations that 
may give rise to actual as well as apparent conflicts of 
interest.  A Fund will expect all Covered Officers to comply 
at all times with the principles in this Code.  A violation 
of this Code by an employee is grounds for disciplinary 
action up to and including discharge and possible legal 
prosecution.  Any question about the application of the Code 
should be referred to the Audit Committee of the Fund's Board 
of Directors ( the "Audit Committee").
II.	Covered Officers Should Handle Ethically Actual and 
Apparent Conflicts of Interest
Overview.  A "conflict of interest" occurs when a 
Covered Officer's private interest interferes with the 
interests of, or his service to, a Fund.  For example, a 
conflict of interest would arise if a Covered Officer, or a 
member of his family, receives improper personal benefits as 
a result of his position with a Fund.
Certain conflicts of interest arise out of the 
relationships between Covered Officers and a Fund and already 
are subject to conflict of interest provisions in the 
Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "Investment Company Act") 
and the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (the "Investment 
Advisers Act").  For example, Covered Officers may not 
individually engage in certain transactions (such as the 
purchase or sale of securities or other property) with a Fund 
because of their status as "affiliated persons" of a Fund.  
The compliance programs and procedures of a Fund and the 
Fund's Investment Manager and Investment Adviser are designed 
to prevent, or identify and correct, violations of these 
provisions.  Certain conflicts of interest also arise out of 
the personal securities trading activities of the Covered 
Officers and the possibility that they may use information 
regarding a Fund's securities trading activities for their 
personal benefit.  Each Fund's Code of Ethics under Rule 17j-
1 under the Investment Company Act is designed to address 
these conflicts of interest.  This Code does not, and is not 
intended to, replace these programs and procedures or a 
Fund's Rule 17j-1 Code of Ethics, and this Code's provisions 
should be viewed as being additional and supplemental to such 
programs, procedures and code.
Although typically not presenting an opportunity for 
improper personal benefit, conflicts arise from, or as a 
result of, the contractual relationship between a Fund and 
its Investment Adviser or Investment Manager of which the 
Covered Officers are also officers or employees.  As a 
result, this Code recognizes that the Covered Officers will, 
in the normal course of their duties (whether formally for a 
Fund or for its Investment Adviser or Investment Manager, or 
for all parties), be involved in establishing policies and 
implementing decisions that will have different effects on 
the Investment Adviser or Investment Manager and a Fund.  The 
participation of the Covered Officers in such activities is 
inherent in the contractual relationship between a Fund and 
its Investment Adviser or Investment Manager and is 
consistent with the performance by the Covered Officers of 
their duties as officers of a Fund.  Thus, if performed in 
conformity with the provisions of the Investment Company Act 
and the Investment Advisers Act, such activities will be 
deemed to have been handled ethically.  In addition, it is 
recognized by a Fund's Board of Directors (the "Board") that 
the Covered Officers may also be officers or employees of one 
or more other investment companies covered by other codes.
Each Covered Officer must not:
?	use his personal influence or personal 
relationships improperly to influence investment 
decisions or financial reporting by a Fund whereby 
the Covered Officer would benefit personally to the 
detriment of a Fund;
?	cause a Fund to take action, or fail to take 
action, for the individual personal benefit of the 
Covered Officer rather than the benefit of the 
Fund; and
?	use material non-public knowledge of portfolio 
transactions made or contemplated for, or actions 
proposed to be taken by, a Fund to trade personally 
or cause others to trade personally in 
contemplation of the market effect of such 
transactions.
Each Covered Officer must, at the time of signing this 
Code, report all material business affiliations outside a 
Fund and must update the report annually.
Covered Officers should avoid situations which involve 
the appearance of, or potential for, conflicts of interest.  
Examples of these situations include:
?	accepting directly or indirectly, anything of 
value, including gifts and gratuities in excess of 
$100 per year from any person or entity with which 
a Fund has current or prospective business 
dealings, not including occasional meals or tickets 
to theatre or sporting events or other similar 
entertainment, provided it is business-related, 
reasonable in cost, appropriate as to time and 
place and not so frequent as to raise any question 
of impropriety;
?	any ownership interest in, or any consulting or 
employment relationship with, any of a Fund's 
service providers, other than its Investment 
Adviser or Investment Manager or any affiliated 
person thereof; and
?	a direct or indirect financial interest in 
commissions, transaction charges or spreads paid by 
a Fund for effecting portfolio transactions or for 
selling or redeeming shares other than an interest 
arising from the Covered Officer's employment, such 
as compensation or equity ownership.
In situations involving a Covered Officer which involve 
the appearance of, or the potential for, conflicts of 
interest, but where the Covered Officer believes that no 
significant conflict of interest exist, the Covered Officer 
must obtain prior written approval from the Audit Committee 
before becoming involved in that situation.  No such approval 
shall be considered a waiver of this Code.
III.	Disclosure and Compliance
?	Each Covered Officer should familiarize himself 
with the disclosure and compliance requirements 
generally applicable to a Fund;
?	Each Covered Officer should not knowingly 
misrepresent, or cause others to misrepresent, 
facts about a Fund to others, whether within or 
outside a Fund, including to a Fund's directors and 
auditors, or to governmental regulators and self-
regulatory organizations;
?	Each Covered Officer should, to the extent 
appropriate within his area of responsibility, 
consult with other officers and employees of a Fund 
and its Investment Adviser or Investment Manager 
with the goal of promoting full, fair, accurate, 
timely and understandable disclosure in the reports 
and documents a Fund files with, or submits to, the 
SEC and in other public communications made by a 
Fund; and
?	It is the responsibility of each Covered Officer to 
promote compliance with the standards and 
restrictions imposed by applicable laws, rules and 
regulations.
IV.	Reporting and Accountability
Each Covered Officer must:
?	upon adoption of the Code or (thereafter as 
applicable, upon becoming a Covered Officer), 
affirm in writing to the Board that he has 
received, read and understands the Code;
?	annually thereafter affirm to the Board that he has 
complied with the requirements of the Code;
?	not retaliate against any other Covered Officer or 
any employee of a Fund or their affiliated persons 
for reports of potential violations that are made 
in good faith; and
?	notify the Audit Committee promptly if he knows of 
any violation of this Code.  Failure to do so is 
itself a violation of this Code.
The Audit Committee is responsible for applying this 
Code to specific situations in which questions are presented 
under it and has the authority to interpret this Code in any 
particular situation.  Any waivers sought by a Covered 
Officer must be considered by the Audit Committee.
A copy of this Code shall be delivered to each employee 
of a Fund and each employee of its Investment Adviser and 
Investment Manager annually together with a memorandum 
requesting that any violations of the Code be communicated 
immediately to the Audit Committee.
Each Fund will follow these procedures in investigating 
and enforcing this Code:
?	the Audit Committee will take all appropriate 
action to investigate any potential violations 
reported to it;
?	if, after such investigation, the Audit Committee 
believes that no violation has occurred, the Audit 
Committee is not required to take any further 
action;
?	if the Audit Committee determines that a violation 
has occurred, it will consider appropriate action, 
which may include review of, and appropriate 
modifications to, applicable policies and 
procedures; notification to appropriate personnel 
of the Investment Adviser or its board; or a 
recommendation to dismiss the Covered Officer;
?	the Audit Committee will be responsible for 
granting waivers of this Code, as appropriate; and
?	any changes to or waivers of this Code will, to the 
extent required, be disclosed as provided by SEC 
rules.
V.	Changes To or Waivers of the Code
No change to or waiver of any provision of this Code 
will be effective until a Fund discloses the nature of any 
amendment to, or waiver from, a provision of the Code in its 
Form N-CSR, or on its website within five business days 
following the date of the amendment or waiver if this method 
of disclosure has been established in its Form N-CSR and made 
available on its website for twelve months.  Any waiver of 
provisions of this Code will be reported in filings with the 
SEC and otherwise reported to a Fund's stockholders to the 
full extent required by the rules of the SEC and by any 
applicable rules of any securities exchange on which a Fund's 
securities are listed.
VI.	Other Policies and Procedures
This Code shall be the sole code of ethics adopted by 
each Fund for purposes of Section 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley 
Act of 2002 and the rules and forms applicable to registered 
investment companies thereunder.  Insofar as other policies 
or procedures of a Fund or its Investment Adviser, Investment 
Manager or other service providers govern or purport to 
govern the behavior or activities of the Covered Officers who 
are subject to this Code, they are superseded by this Code to 
the extent that they conflict with the provisions of this 
Code.
VII.	Amendments
Any amendments to this Code must be approved or ratified 
by a majority vote of the Audit Committee and the Board, 
including a majority of directors who are not interested 
persons as defined in the Investment Company Act.
VIII.	Confidentiality
All reports and records prepared or maintained pursuant 
to this Code will be considered confidential and shall be 
maintained and protected accordingly.  Except as otherwise 
required by law or this Code, such matters shall not be 
disclosed to anyone other than the Audit Committee, the 
Board, the Fund and its counsel and its Investment Adviser 
and Investment Manager and their respective counsel.
IX.	Internal Use
The Code is intended solely for the internal use by a 
Fund and does not constitute an admission, by or on behalf of 
a Fund, as to any fact, circumstance or legal conclusion.
I have read and understand the terms of the Code.  I 
recognize the responsibilities and obligations incurred by me 
as a result of my being subject to the Code.  I hereby agree 
to abide by the Code.
_________________________
Date:_____________________




EXHIBIT 11(b)
CERTIFICATION 
PURSUANT TO SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002
I, John J. O'Keefe, certify that:
1.	I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of The 
Japan Equity Fund, Inc.
2.	Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain 
any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to 
state a material fact necessary to make the 
statements made, in light of the circumstances 
under which such statements were made, not 
misleading with respect to the period covered by 
this report;
3.	Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, 
and other financial information included in this 
report, fairly present in all material respects the 
financial condition, results of operations, changes 
in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial 
statements are required to include a statement of 
cash flows) of the registrant as of, and for, the 
periods presented in this report;
4.	The registrant's other certifying officers and I 
are responsible for establishing and maintaining 
disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in 
Rule 30a-2(c) under the Investment Company Act of 
1940) for the registrant and have:
(a)	Designed such disclosure controls and 
procedures, or caused such disclosure controls 
and procedures to be designed under our 
supervision, to ensure that material 
information relating to the registrant, 
including its consolidated subsidiaries, is 
made known to us by others within those 
entities, particularly during the period in 
which this report is being prepared;
 (b)	Evaluated the effectiveness of the 
registrant's disclosure controls and 
procedures and presented in this report our 
conclusions about the effectiveness of the 
disclosure controls and procedures, as of a 
date within 90 days prior to the filing date 
of this report based on such evaluation; and
(c)	Disclosed in this report any change in the 
registrant's internal control over financial 
reporting that occurred during the second 
fiscal quarter of the period covered by this 
report that has materially affected, or is 
reasonably likely to materially affect, the 
registrant's internal control over financial 
reporting; and
5.	The registrant's other certifying officers and I have 
disclosed, to the registrant's auditors and the audit 
committee of the registrant's board of directors (or 
persons performing the equivalent functions):
(a)	all significant deficiencies and material 
weaknesses in the design or operation of internal 
control which are reasonably likely to adversely 
affect the registrant's ability to record, process, 
summarize, and report financial information; and
(b)	any fraud, whether or not material, that involves 
management or other employees who have a 
significant role in the registrant's internal 
controls over financial reporting.
Date:  January 6, 2005
\s\John J. O'Keefe
-------------------------------
--------
John J. O'Keefe, Vice President 
& Treasurer




CERTIFICATION 
PURSUANT TO SECTION 302 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002
I, Hiroshi Kimura, certify that:
1.	I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of The 
Japan Equity Fund, Inc.
2.	Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain 
any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to 
state a material fact necessary to make the 
statements made, in light of the circumstances 
under which such statements were made, not 
misleading with respect to the period covered by 
this report;
3.	Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, 
and other financial information included in this 
report, fairly present in all material respects the 
financial condition, results of operations, changes 
in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial 
statements are required to include a statement of 
cash flows) of the registrant as of, and for, the 
periods presented in this report;
4.	The registrant's other certifying officers and I 
are responsible for establishing and maintaining 
disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in 
Rule 30a-2(c) under the Investment Company Act of 
1940) for the registrant and have:
(a)	designed such disclosure controls and 
procedures, or caused such disclosure controls 
and procedures to be designed under our 
supervision, to ensure that material 
information relating to the registrant, 
including its consolidated subsidiaries, is 
made known to us by others within those 
entities, particularly during the period in 
which this report is being prepared;
 (b)	Evaluated the effectiveness of the 
registrant's disclosure controls and 
procedures and presented in this report our 
conclusions about the effectiveness of the 
disclosure controls and procedures, as of a 
date within 90 days prior to the filing date 
of this report based on such evaluation; and
(c)	Disclosed in this report any change in the 
registrant's internal control over financial 
reporting that occurred during the second 
fiscal quarter of the period covered by this 
report that has materially affected, or is 
reasonably likely to materially affect, the 
registrant's internal control over financial 
reporting; and
5.	The registrant's other certifying officers and I 
have disclosed, to the registrant's auditors and 
the audit committee of the registrant's board of 
directors (or persons performing the equivalent 
functions):
(a)	all significant deficiencies and material 
weaknesses in the design or operation of 
internal control which are reasonably likely 
to adversely affect the registrant's ability 
to record, process, summarize, and report 
financial information; and
(b)	any fraud, whether or not material, that 
involves management or other employees who 
have a significant role in the registrant's 
internal controls over financial reporting.
Date:  January 6, 2005
\s\ Hiroshi Kimura
-------------------------------
--------
Hiroshi Kimura, Chairman




CERTIFICATION 
PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 
OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002
The undersigned, the Vice President & Treasurer of The 
Japan Equity Fund, Inc. (the "Fund"), with respect to the 
Form N-CSR for the period ended October 31, 2004 as filed 
with the Securities and Exchange Commission, hereby 
certifies, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted 
pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, 
that:
1.	such Form N-CSR fully complies with the 
requirements of section 13(a) or 15(d) of the 
Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and
2.	the information contained in such Form N-CSR fairly 
presents, in all material respects, the financial 
condition and results of operations of the Funds.
Dated:  January 6, 2005
/s/ John J. O'Keefe
-------------------------------
---
John J. O'Keefe
This certification is being furnished solely pursuant to 
18 U.S.C. Section 1350 and is not being filed as part of the 
Report or as a separate disclosure document.


CERTIFICATION 
PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 
OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002
The undersigned, the Chairman of The Japan Equity Fund, 
Inc. (the "Fund"), with respect to the Form N-CSR for the 
period ended April 30, 2004 as filed with the Securities and 
Exchange Commission, hereby certifies, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 
Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the 
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that:
1.	such Form N-CSR fully complies with the 
requirements of section 13(a) or 15(d) of the 
Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and
2.	the information contained in such Form N-CSR fairly 
presents, in all material respects, the financial 
condition and results of operations of the Funds.
Dated:  January 6, 2005
/s/ Hiroshi Kimura
-------------------------------
---
Hiroshi Kimura
This certification is being furnished solely pursuant to 
18 U.S.C. Section 1350 and is not being filed as part of the 
Report or as a separate disclosure document.


EXHIBIT 11 (c)
The Japan Equity Fund, Inc. 
Proxy Voting Policy and Procedures
The Board of Directors of The Japan Equity Fund, Inc. 
(the "Fund") hereby adopts the following policy and 
procedures with respect to voting proxies relating to Fund 
securities managed by Daiwa SB Investments (USA) Ltd. (the 
"Investment Manager").
I.	Policy
It is the policy of the Board of Directors of the Fund 
(the "Board") to delegate the responsibility for voting 
proxies relating to securities held by the Fund to the 
Investment Manager as part of the Manager's general 
management of the Fund's assets, subject to the Board's 
continuing oversight.  The Board of Directors of the Fund 
hereby delegates such responsibility to the Investment 
Manager, and directs the Investment Manager to vote proxies 
relating to Fund portfolio securities managed by the 
Investment Manager consistent with the duties and procedures 
set forth below.  The Investment Manager may retain one or 
more vendors to review, monitor and recommend how to vote 
proxies in a manner consistent with the duties and procedures 
set forth below, to ensure such proxies are voted on a timely 
basis and to provide reporting and/or record retention 
services in connection with proxy voting for the Fund.
II.	Fiduciary Duty
The right to vote a proxy with respect to securities 
held by the Fund is an asset of the Fund.  The Investment 
Manager, to which authority to vote on behalf of the Fund is 
delegated, acts as a fiduciary of the Fund and must vote 
proxies in a manner consistent with the best interest of the 
Fund and its shareholders.  In discharging this fiduciary 
duty, the Investment Manager must maintain and adhere to its 
policies and procedures for addressing conflicts of interest 
and must vote in a manner substantially consistent with its 
policies, procedures and guidelines, as presented to the 
Board.
III.	Procedures
The following are the procedures adopted by the Board 
for the administration of this policy.
A.	Review of Investment Manager's Proxy Voting 
Procedures.  The Investment Manager shall present 
to the Board their policies, procedures and other 
guidelines for voting proxies at least annually, 
and must notify the Board promptly of material 
changes to any of these documents, including 
changes to policies addressing conflicts of 
interest.
B.	Voting Record Reporting.  The Investment Manager 
shall provide the voting record information 
necessary for the completion and filing of Form-NPX 
to the Fund at least annually.  Such voting record 
information shall be in a form acceptable to the 
Fund and shall be provided at such time(s) as are 
required for the timely filing of Form-NPX and at 
such additional time(s) as the Fund and the 
Investment Manager may agree from time to time.  
With respect to those proxies that the Investment 
Manager has identified as involving a conflict of 
interest , the Investment Manager shall submit a 
separate report indicating the nature of the 
conflict of interest and how that conflict was 
resolved with respect to the voting of the proxy.
C.	Record Retention.  The Investment Manager shall 
maintain such records with respect to the voting of 
proxies as may be required by the Investment 
Advisers Act of 1940 and the rules promulgated 
thereunder or by the Investment Company Act of 1940 
and the rules promulgated thereunder.
D.	Conflicts of Interest.  Any actual or potential 
conflicts of interest between the Investment 
Manager and the Fund's shareholders arising from 
the proxy voting process will be addressed by the 
Investment Manager and the Investment Manager's 
application of its proxy voting procedures pursuant 
to the delegation of proxy voting responsibilities 
to the Investment Manager.  In the event that the 
Investment Manager notifies the officer(s) of the 
Fund that a conflict of interest cannot be resolved 
under the Investment Manager's Proxy Voting 
Procedures, such officer(s) are responsible for 
notifying the Chairman of the Board of the Fund of 
the irreconcilable conflict of interest and 
assisting the Chairman with any actions he 
determines are necessary.
IV.	Revocation
The delegation by the Board of the authority to vote 
proxies relating to securities of the Fund is entirely 
voluntary and may be revoked by the Board, in whole or in 
part, at any time.
V.	Annual Filing
The Fund shall file an annual report of each proxy voted 
with respect to securities of the Fund during the twelve-
month period ended June 30 on Form N-PX not later than August 
31 of each year. 
VI.	Disclosures
A.	The Fund shall include in its annual report filed 
on Form N-CSR:
1.	a description of this policy and of the 
policies and procedures used by the Fund and 
the Investment Manager to determine how to 
vote proxies relating to portfolio securities 
or copies of such policies and procedures; and
2.	a statement disclosing that a description of 
the policies and procedures used by or on 
behalf of the Fund to determine how to vote 
proxies relating to securities of the Fund is 
available without charge, upon request, by 
calling the Fund's toll-free telephone number; 
through a specified Internet address, if 
applicable; and on the SEC's website; and
3.	a statement disclosing that information 
regarding how the Fund voted proxies relating 
to Fund securities during the most recent 12-
month period ended June 30 is available 
without charge, upon request, by calling the 
Fund's toll-free telephone number; or through 
a specified Internet address; or both; and on 
the SEC's website.
VII.	Review of Policy
The Board shall review from time to time this policy to 
determine its sufficiency and shall make and approve any 
changes that it deems necessary from time to time.
Adopted:   November 25, 2003




Exhibit 10 (d)
Proxy voting policy for Daiwa SB Investments (USA) Ltd.
Statement of Policies and Procedures for 
Voting Proxies
INTRODUCTION
As a registered investment adviser, Daiwa SB Investments 
(USA) Ltd. ("Daiwa," "we" or "us") has a fiduciary duty to 
act solely in the best interests of our clients.  As part of 
this duty, we recognize that we must exercise voting rights 
in the best interests of our clients.
Daiwa recognizes the importance of good corporate 
governance in ensuring that management and boards of 
directors fulfill their obligations to shareholders.  As part 
of our investment process, we take into account the attitudes 
of management and boards of directors on corporate governance 
issues when deciding whether to invest in a company.
Daiwa is a global investment manager, and invests 
significantly in emerging markets.  It should be noted that 
protection for shareholders may vary significantly from 
jurisdiction to jurisdiction, and in some cases may be 
substantially less than in the U.S. or developed countries.
This statement is intended to comply with Rule 206(4)-6 
of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.  It sets forth the 
policy and procedures of Daiwa for voting proxies for our 
clients, including investment companies registered under the 
Investment Company Act of 1940.
PROXY VOTING POLICIES
It is the general policy of Daiwa to support management 
of the companies in which it invests and will cast votes in 
accordance with management's proposals.  However, Daiwa 
reserves the right to depart from this policy in order to 
avoid voting decisions that we believe may be contrary to our 
clients' best interests.
Elections of Directors:  In many instances, election of 
directors is a routine voting issue.  Unless there is a proxy 
fight for seats on the Board or we determine that there are 
other compelling reasons for withholding votes for directors, 
we will vote in favor of the management proposed slate of 
directors.  That said, we believe that directors have a duty 
to respond to shareholder actions that have received 
significant shareholder support.  We may withhold votes for 
directors that fail to act on key issues such as failure to 
implement proposals to declassify boards, failure to 
implement a majority vote requirement, failure to submit a 
rights plan to a shareholder vote and failure to act on 
tender offers where a majority of shareholders have tendered 
their shares.
Appointment of Auditors:  The selection of an 
independent accountant to audit a company's financial 
statements is generally a routine business matter.  Daiwa 
believes that management remains in the best position to 
choose the accounting firm and will generally support 
management's recommendation.
Changes in Capital Structure:  Changes in a company's 
charter, articles of incorporation or by-laws are often 
technical and administrative in nature.  Absent a compelling 
reason to the contrary, Daiwa will cast its votes in 
accordance with the company's management on such proposals.  
However, we will review and analyze on a case-by-case basis 
any non-routine proposals that are likely to affect the 
structure and operation of the company or have a material 
economic effect on the company.
Corporate Restructurings,  Mergers and Acquisitions:  
Daiwa believes proxy votes dealing with corporate 
reorganizations are an extension of the investment decision 
and will take account of our investment process policy in 
deciding how to vote.
Corporate Governance:  Daiwa recognizes the importance 
of good corporate governance in ensuring that management and 
the board of directors fulfill their obligations to the 
shareholders.  We generally favor proposals promoting 
transparency and accountability within a company.
Social and Corporate Responsibility:  Daiwa recognizes 
the importance of supporting sound and responsible policies 
in relation to social, political and environmental issues.  
However, in the interests of shareholders, we reserve the 
right to vote against proposals that are unduly burdensome or 
result in unnecessary and excessive costs to the company.  We 
may abstain from voting on social proposals that do not have 
a readily determinable financial impact on shareholder value.
Executive Compensation:  Daiwa believes that company 
management and the compensation committee of the board of 
directors should, within reason, be given latitude to 
determine the types and mix of compensation and benefit 
awards offered.  Whether proposed by a shareholder or 
management, we will review proposals relating to executive 
compensation plans and, if deemed excessive, may vote against 
the proposals.
PROXY VOTING PROCEDURES
Proxy voting
Our portfolio management team is responsible for the 
coordination of Daiwa's proxy voting.  They liaise with the 
Product managers and/or the Proxy voting committee to 
ascertain how Daiwa will vote.  They will then instruct the 
relevant Custodians.  The portfolio management team is also 
responsible for ensuring that full and adequate records of 
proxy voting are kept.
The Product managers will implement the Proxy voting 
policies by instructing proxy voting in accordance with the 
general principles contained herein.
Proxy Voting Committee
We have formed a Proxy Voting Committee to regularly 
review our general proxy policies and consider specific proxy 
voting matters as and when deemed necessary.  Members of the 
committees include senior investment personnel and 
representatives of the Legal & Compliance Department.  The 
committee may also evaluate proxies where we face a material 
conflict of interest (as discussed below).
Conflicts of Interest
Daiwa recognizes that there is a potential conflict of 
interest when we vote a proxy solicited by an issuer with 
whom we have any material business or personal relationship 
that may affect how we vote on the issuer's proxy.  We 
believe that oversight by the proxy voting committee ensures 
that proxies are voted with only our clients' best interests 
in mind.  In order to avoid any perceived conflict of 
interests, the following procedures have been established for 
use when we encounter a potential conflict.
The portfolio management team will refer to the Legal 
and compliance team any proxy votes that are issued by 
existing clients or where Daiwa holds a significant voting 
percentage of the company.  The Legal and compliance team 
will make the initial determination about whether a material 
conflict of interest exists based on the facts and 
circumstances of each particular situation.
If our proposed vote is consistent with our stated proxy 
voting policy, no further review is necessary.
If our proposed vote is contrary to our stated proxy 
voting policy but is also contrary to management's 
recommendation, no further review is necessary.
If our proposed vote is contrary to our stated proxy 
voting policy and is consistent with management's 
recommendation, the proposal is escalated to the proxy 
committee for final review and determination.
Proxies of Certain Non-U.S. Issuers
Proxy voting in certain countries requires "share 
blocking."  That is, shareholders wishing to vote their 
proxies must deposit their shares shortly before the date of 
the meeting (usually one-week) with a designated depositary.  
During this blocking period, shares that will be voted at the 
meeting cannot be sold until the meeting has taken place and 
the shares are returned to the clients' custodian banks.  
Daiwa may determine that the value of exercising the vote 
does not outweigh the detriment of not being able to transact 
in the shares during this period.  Accordingly, if share 
blocking is required we may abstain from voting those shares.  
In such a situation we would have determined that the cost of 
voting exceeds the expected benefit to the client.
PROXY VOTING RECORD
Clients may obtain information on how Daiwa voted with 
respect to their proxies by contacting our Client services 
team at Daiwa SB Investments (USA) Ltd.. 32 Old Slip, 11th 
Floor, New York, New York, Tel No. 212-612-8500, Fax No. 212-
612-8518/8519 or email a_baksi@dsbiusa.net / 
m_gugliotta@dsbiusa.net.
 	As it is used in this document, the term "conflict of 
interest" refers to a situation in which the 
Investment Manager or affiliated persons of the Investment 
Manager have a financial interest in a 
matter presented by a proxy other than the obligation they 
incur as Investment Manager to the Fund 
which could potentially compromise the Investment Manager's 
independence of judgment and action 
with respect to the voting of the proxy.
 	The Fund must file its first report on Form N-PX not 
later than August 31, 2004, for the twelve-month 
period beginning July 1, 2003, and ending June 30, 2004.
 
 
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