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Japan Post Office head office building. Japan Post (日本郵政公社, Nippon Yūsei Kōsha) was a Japanese statutory corporation that existed from 2003 to 2007, offering postal and package delivery services, banking services, and life insurance.
Japan Post Co., Ltd. (日本郵便株式会社, Nippon Yū-bin Kabushiki-gaisha), is a Japanese post, logistics and courier headquartered in Tokyo. It is part of the Japan Post Holdings group. History
Yucho (ゆうちょ, Yūcho) is an interbank network in Japan, owned and operated by the postal savings division of Japan Post Bank. It counts some 26,519 ATMs, of which 23,500 are at post offices and 2,869 are away from post offices. The number of ATMs correspond to about one for every post office in Japan, excluding a few post offices that ...
Japan Post Network Co., Ltd. (郵便局株式会社, Yū-bin Kyoku Kabushiki-gaisha), was a Japanese company which operated the post office of Japan. It was part of the Japan Post Holdings group. History
In its early years, TCS faced regulatory challenges under the 1898 Post Office Act, which limited the delivery of "letters" to the national post office. [1] TCS contended that its services included "business-related documents" and international packages, leading to a joint venture arrangement where DHL owned 51% of the international delivery ...
On April 25, 2017, Japan Post Holdings said it would have a ¥40bn ($360m) loss for its first full financial year as a listed company, due to losses from Toll Group, which it controversially acquired in 2015. [11] In September 2017, the Japanese government announced its sale of $12 billion worth of Japan Post Holdings Co. Ltd. stock.
It also appears in 🏣 (Unicode U+1F3E3), an emoji representing a (specifically Japanese) post office, as the sign on the building. 〠 (Unicode U+3020) is a character of Japan Post. Its name is Number-kun. Japan Post released a new character, "Poston", in 1998, so Number-kun is rarely used nowadays.
The Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications (郵政省, Yūsei-shō) was one of the ministries in the Japanese government. It was formed on 1 August 1952 by the merger of the Ministry of Postal Services [1] (郵政省) and the Ministry of Telecommunications [2] (電気通信省), which themselves superseded the Ministry of Communications (逓信省, Teishin-shō) from 1 April 1946.