TOKYO, Aug 31 (Reuters) - Workers at a major Tokyo department store went on strike on Thursday after talks with management over the planned sale of their company broke down, marking the first major walk-out the country has seen in decades.

Some 900 workers at the flagship Seibu store in the bustling district of Ikebukuro are protesting the sale of Sogo & Seibu, a unit of Japanese retail giant Seven & i (3382.T), to U.S. fund Fortress Investment Group.

They are seeking job and business continuity guarantees, unhappy with reported plans for discount electronics retailer Yodobashi Holdings to take over roughly half of the store.

Critics, who include officials in Ikebukuro, argue that such a change would cheapen Seibu’s image by replacing many individual boutiques in store.

The deal will close on Friday, Seven & i said, adding it had reduced Sogo & Seibu’s sale value by 30 billion yen ($205 million) from the originally agreed 250 billion yen after requesting Fortress give “maximum consideration of Sogo & Seibu’s business continuation and continuation of employment”.

Seven and i will also waive 91.6 billion yen in debt, or more than half the amount it has lent to its unit, as part of the deal.

In a statement, Fortress said it would work with Seven & i to support Sogo & Seibu’s management to maintain its workforce “to the extent possible.” It plans to invest more than 20 billion yen with partner Yodobashi to renovate Sogo & Seibu’s stores, it said.

Strikes are extremely rare in Japan, where negotiations over wages and work conditions are typically agreed amicably. This one-day strike - the first at a major Japanese department store in 61 years - followed months of negotiations between Sogo & Seibu management and the workers’ union, and comes amid an acute labour shortage in Japan.

On Thursday morning, Seibu workers protested in front of the store in the summer heat while members of various other unions handed out flyers to show their support.

Seven & i apologised for the strike and said the subsidiary would continue to hold talks with the union. Other Seibu and Sogo department stores were open for business as usual.

“I regret that we could not change the outcome but it’s also a fact that our business is struggling,” union leader Yasuhiro Teraoka told reporters after the sale was announced.

“Maybe it was our failure not to have raised our voices until now… but I believe that having so many people see and hear what we had to say made it a significant event.”

CAVEAT EMPTOR

The strike comes amid an extremely tight labour market in Japan, where workers at major companies won the biggest wage increases in three decades at labour negotiations this spring. Those gains have, however, been eroded by inflation at a 41-year high, and wages in real terms have continued to fall.

Sogo & Seibu’s workers had the support of labour groups from rival department stores including Takashimaya and Isetan Mitsukoshi (3099.T).

“I think many workers have gotten some encouragement from this case,” said Rikkyo University professor Wakana Shuto, who specialises in labour issues. “Considering the industry’s difficulties, the conditions at Sogo & Seibu are not unique.”

The Seibu Ikebukuro store is Japan’s third-largest department store by sales, according to media reports, but its owner Sogo & Seibu has been in the red for the last four years.

For overseas funds looking to restructure Japan Inc brands, the walk-out raises the spectre of similar hurdles, said Tokyo-based corporate lawyer Stephen Givens.

“You can acquire a Japanese company, as a foreigner, through brute force, and it’s not going to do you any good if the people who are actually managing the Japanese company and working for the Japanese company aren’t happy with results,” he said.

“This is one of the caveat emptor things that all foreign would-be acquirers should keep in mind.”

($1 = 145.9200 yen)

Reporting by Ritsuko Shimizu, Mariko Katsumura, Kaori Kaneko and Rocky Swift; Writing by Chang-Ran Kim; Editing by Edwina Gibbs and Stephen Coates and Miral Fahmy