Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mitsukoshi department store in Nihombashi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, Japan. In August 2007, Isetan Co. Ltd. and Mitsukoshi Ltd. announced that the two companies "have agreed to merge and form a new holding company" in April 2008. [1] On 9 January 2010, Nobukazu Muto (b. 1945), the company's chairman and chief executive officer died. [2]
TOKYO — Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings posted a net loss of more than 40 billion yen, or $365 million, for its most recent fiscal year, as department stores in Japan continue to struggle with the ...
Isetan (伊勢丹, Isetan) (TYO: 8238 unlisted on March 26, 2008, SGX: I15) is a Japanese department store. Based in Shinjuku , Tokyo , Isetan has branches throughout Japan and South East Asia, including in Jinan , Kuala Lumpur , Selangor , Shanghai , Singapore , and Tianjin , and formerly in Bangkok , Hong Kong , Kaohsiung , London , and Vienna .
The Mitsukoshi headquarters are located on the left side of the street. Mitsukoshi, Ltd. (株式会社三越, Kabushiki gaisha Mitsukoshi) is an international department store chain with headquarters in Tokyo, Japan. It is a subsidiary of Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings, which also owns the Isetan department store chain.
In 2002, Matsuya purchased Isetan stock in an attempt to cement the relationship. However, the two firms grew apart in 2007 after Isetan agreed to merge with Matsuya's bitter rival Mitsukoshi, which also operates a flagship department store in Ginza, and form Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings.
JNRSC sold 68.3% of JR-West in an initial public offering on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in October 1996. After JNRSC was dissolved in October 1998, its shares of JR-West were transferred to the government-owned Japan Railway Construction Public Corporation (JRCC), which merged into the Japan Railway Construction, Transport and Technology Agency ...
This page was last edited on 18 November 2024, at 10:16 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
All six of the alcohol companies mentioned above clocked negative stock performance in the past year, while the S&P 500 jumped 26%. Brown-Forman and Pernod Ricard led the losses with 34% and 31% ...