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A keiretsu (Japanese: 系列, literally system, series, grouping of enterprises, order of succession) is a set of companies with interlocking business relationships and shareholdings that dominated the Japanese economy in the second half of the 20th century.
Pages in category "Keiretsu" The following 22 pages are in this category, out of 22 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
Keiretsu (9 C, 22 P) Kirin Group (1 C, 7 P) M. Midori-kai (7 C, 52 P) Mitsubishi (3 C, 46 P) Mitsui (13 C, 54 P) ... Pages in category "Conglomerate companies of Japan"
Marunouchi headquarters for the Mitsubishi zaibatsu, 1909. Zaibatsu (財閥, lit. ' asset clique ') is a Japanese term referring to industrial and financial vertically integrated business conglomerates in the Empire of Japan, whose influence and size allowed control over significant parts of the Japanese economy from the Meiji period to World War II.
How GE’s CEO Larry Culp ditched mediocre manufacturing and engineered a legendary turnaround—with the help of a Japanese-born ‘sensei’ Shawn Tully January 26, 2024 at 3:00 AM
The Sanwa Group (三和グループ, Sanwa gurūpu) was a leading Japanese keiretsu, based in Osaka, between World War II and the Japanese asset price bubble in the early 1990s. It remains in existence as a jointly held company called Midori-kai (みどり会). Sanwa Bank was a major financier for the textile industry in the 1950s. After ...
The DKB Group (第一勧銀グループ, Dai'ichi Kangin Gurūpu) or the Dai-Ichi Kangyo Group was the largest Japanese keiretsu in the late 1990s. [1]The group emerged after World War II and coalesced around the Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank.
The Sumitomo Group (Japanese: 住友グループ, Hepburn: Sumitomo Gurūpu) is a Japanese corporate group and keiretsu that traces its roots to the zaibatsu groups that were dissolved after World War II. Unlike the zaibatsu of the pre-war period, there is no controlling company with regulatory power. Instead, the companies in the group hold ...