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gu-global.com G.U. ( ジーユー , jīyū ) is a Japanese discount casual wear designer, manufacturer and retailer, with 451 stores (As of 31 May 2022 [update] ) across Japan. [ 1 ] It is fully owned by the company Fast Retailing , which is better known as the owner of the retail chain Uniqlo .
In 1984, the company, which ran a menswear store in Ube, Yamaguchi, opened a new casual-wear store named Unique Clothing Warehouse in Hiroshima City; this was the forebear of Uniqlo. [5] In September 1991, Ogori Shoji changed its name to Fast Retailing Co., Ltd., and was listed on the Hiroshima Stock Exchange in July 1994. [5]
Uniqlo (유니클로) generated more than 2 billion won ($1.7 million) in one day's sales on 11 November 2011 when it opened Asia's largest flagship store in central Seoul. The sales figure was the highest ever set by a fashion outlet in Korea. Uniqlo earns over US$1.2 billion in annual revenue with 134 shops in South Korea. [35]
Tadashi Yanai (柳井 正, Yanai Tadashi, born 7 February 1949) is a Japanese billionaire businessman and the founder and president of Fast Retailing, the parent company of Uniqlo ("unique clothing").
Tadashi Yanai, Japan’s richest man and the founder of $73 billion apparel empire Uniqlo, is perusing the art books that line his wood-paneled office, which, like most of his firm’s cavernous ...
Tahari was allocated $53 million of the sale and had no shares in the new company which was renamed Theory Holdings. The deal was explained by the fact that the label was to become a truly "global brand". [5] [6] The Japanese parent company has since then traded under the name of Link Theory Holdings and went public in 2005. Fast Retailing had ...
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Fast-fashion: H&M, Zara, Uniqlo; Discount stores: Kmart, Target, Big W, The Reject Shop. Dimmeys, Best & Less; Off-price retailers: TK Maxx; Although there were a number of department stores in Australia for much of the 20th century, including chains such as Grace Bros and Waltons, many disappeared during the 1980s and 1990s.