Product Code Database
Example Keywords: nokia -psp $22-158
   » » Wiki: Sojitz
Tag Wiki 'Sojitz'.
Tag

lead=yes is a (general trading company) based in , . It is engaged in a wide range of businesses globally, including buying, selling, importing, and exporting goods, manufacturing and selling products, providing services, and planning and coordinating , in Japan and overseas. Sojitz also in various sectors and conducts financing activities. The broad range of sectors in which Sojitz operates includes , , resources, , foodstuff resources, agricultural and forestry resources, consumer goods, and .

Sojitz was formed in 2004 by the merger of Nisshō Iwai Kabushiki-gaisha and Nichimen Kabushiki-gaisha. The name "Sojitz" is derived from the names of Nissho Iwai and Nichimen, both of which include the character "日" (sun). "Sojitz", literally meaning "twin suns", implies a merger of equals between the two companies. The corporate logo is a stylized version of the first character in its Japanese name.


History

Nichimen
Beginning around 1878, the Japanese government promoted the development of spinning as an initial means of developing modern industry in Japan in the wake of the Meiji Restoration. Japan's native raw cotton supply proved inadequate to meet demand, and there was only one Japanese importer of raw cotton at the time, making the industry highly reliant on foreign merchants. To improve this situation, a group of spinning companies established Nippon Menka Kabushiki Kaisha in in 1892 under the leadership of Tsuneki Sano, a 38-year-old former government official.

After the Russo-Japanese War, Nichimen expanded its business from importing. The company began cotton spinning operations in the Kwantung Leased Territory and established offices in China, Korea, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom to supply local markets. In 1910, Nichimen opened a subsidiary in Fort Worth, Texas to enter the raw cotton trade in the United States. World War I strained cotton supply in Europe, boosting Nichimen's international business further. In the late 1910s the company expanded into South America and Africa, trading in cotton as well as wool, food products, and machinery.

The harmed Nichimen's cotton business, spurring the company's diversification beyond cotton to trade in silk, rayon and other materials. During World War II, Nichimen was tapped by the Japanese military to manage production of flour, matches and starch. The company changed its name to Nichimen Enterprise (Nichimen Jitsugyo) in 1943 to reflect its more diverse business.

The largest trading companies were dismantled after the war, giving Nichimen an early lead among the in the 1950s and a six percent share of Japanese foreign trade by 1958. Nichimen became closely affiliated with Osaka-based in 1955, which financed all of Nichimen's domestic business. Nichimen was not the main trading company for the Sanwa as that position was already held by Iwai & Co. Nichimen Jitsugyo.

By 1970, Nichimen was trading in steel, electronics, motor vehicles and fibers in addition to textiles. Nichimen served as the joint venture partner for when it began operations in Japan in the 1970s. Nichimen Co., Ltd. changed its name to Nichimen Corporation in 1982. Nichimen, like other sogo shosha, was hit hard by the collapse of the Japanese asset price bubble in the early 1990s, and subsequently made a strategic shift from the "soft" businesses of lumber, food, and chemicals trading to the "hard" businesses of machinery, steel, and construction.


Nissho Iwai
Nissho Iwai was formed in 1968 by the merger of Nissho Company and Iwai Sangyo Company.

Nissho Company was founded in in 1902 as Suzuki & Company () under the leadership of Naokichi Kaneko () when died this company's predecessor shop's founder, Iwajiro Suzuki () (1837–1894). Suzuki was originally a sugar trading firm but later diversified into flour, steel, tobacco, beer, insurance, shipping and shipbuilding; it became the second Japanese member of the in London. Iwai & Company () was founded as a steel trading firm in 1901 and established a number of prominent group enterprises including , Nisshin Steel, Tokuyama Soda, and Fuji Photo Film. It changed its name to Iwai Sangyo Company in 1943.

Both Nissho and Iwai emerged as metals and machinery trading companies after World War II but were significantly smaller than the four largest sogo shosha competitors (Mitsubishi Corporation, Mitsui & Co., and ). Iwai was poorly managed after the war and was on the brink of failure in the early 1960s, while Nissho was profitable and successfully expanding overseas. The Japanese government directed the merger of the two companies in 1968, forming the fifth largest trading company in Japan (falling back to sixth place in 1972 behind Sumitomo Corporation). played a role in the merger and the combined firm became the trading arm of the .

(2025). 9780542875380 .

Nissho Iwai was involved in a corruption scandal in 1979 after it passed on a 500 million yen bribe from McDonnell Douglas to the director general of the Japan Defense Agency in an attempt to influence the sale of F-4 Phantom aircraft to the Japan Air Self-Defense Force. In the wake of the scandal, one Nissho Iwai executive committed suicide by jumping from the company's headquarters building. The scandal was uncovered only three years after a similar scandal involving Lockheed and conspiring to bribe Prime Minister .

(1998). 9780415143233, Taylor & Francis. .

In subsequent years, the company had a strong focus on liquefied natural gas and trading, as well as industrial project development.


Merger
Nichimen and Nissho Iwai consolidated on a holding company level in 2003 and consolidated their operating units in 2004, adopting the Sojitz name at that time. The merged holding company, Sojitz Holdings, combined with the merged operating company, Sojitz Corporation, in 2005.


Current operations
Today, the Sojitz Group consists of approximately 440 and located in Japan and throughout the world, and it is developing its wide-ranging general trading company operations in roughly 50 countries and regions across the globe.

Sojitz (through its subsidiary Sojitz Aerospace Company) is the largest seller of commercial aircraft in Japan, as it acts as a sales agent for both and Bombardier Aerospace. It distributes Mitsubishi Motors and automobiles in various countries, and also develops and operates power plants, industrial plants in various countries. In 2013 it received an order to develop a section of the Western Dedicated Freight Corridor between and in India. The Sojitz Aerospace Company also acts as Sojitz's primary arm for defense related business.

Sojitz has also invested in Hyundai Nishat, the arm of in partnership with .

Sojitz owns oil and natural gas concessions in the , Gulf of Mexico, , , and . It owns the Gregory coal mine and most of the Minerva Coal Mine in and distributes in Japan for .

Its operations in the chemicals sector include production in , mining in and trading in various markets worldwide. In November 2010, it signed an agreement with the Australian mining company to import $350 million worth of rare earth minerals from Lynas' mine in , Australia.

Its consumer business operations include trading in grains, feed, sugar, coffee, fish, wood and paper. It owns the Japanese rights to several consumer brands such as and McGregor.


ADV Films acquisition
In June 2006, Sojitz acquired a 20% stake in anime distributor ADV Films. This was done as a means of acquiring more titles in the Japanese market. From this point on, virtually all titles that ADV acquired were under Sojitz's ownership. However, in January 2008, ADV mysteriously removed a large number of titles from their website. All the titles removed were titles acquired since the Sojitz acquisition including , which had test disks sent out with dubbed episodes. As of May 2008, was licensed by Bandai Entertainment. ADV Films made booth appearances at the convention, but they canceled their planned panel. In July 2008, announced the acquisition of thirty of these titles.

The titles removed from ADV's website are as follows: 009-1, 5 Centimeters per Second, , both the film and television adaptions of the Key visual novel Air, Best Student Council, Blade of the Phantom Master, Comic Party Revolution, Coyote Ragtime Show, , the 2006 live-action horror film Ghost Train, , , , , the 2006 anime remake of yet another Key visual novel, Kanon, , Le Chevalier D'Eon, , Moeyo Ken, Moonlight Mile, Nerima Daikon Brothers, Pani Poni Dash!, Project Blue Earth SOS, , , , UFO Princess Valkyrie, the first anime of , Venus vs. Virus, The Wallflower, Welcome to the NHK, and .


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time