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Nissin Kogyo

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Nissin Kogyo
Native name
Ngày tin công nghiệp kabushiki gaisha
Company typeBrand
IndustryAutomotive
FoundedOctober 1953;70 years ago(1953-10)
Headquarters,
Japan
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Yasushi Kawaguchi[1]
(PresidentandCEO)
Products
  • Brakes systems for 2- and 4-wheeled vehicles
  • Aluminum products
RevenueJPY166.8 billion (FY2016) (US$1.54 billion) (FY 2016)
JPY 5.3 billion (FY 2016) (US$ 49 million) (FY 2016)
Number of employees
9,557 (consolidated, as of March 31, 2016)
ParentHitachi Astemo
Footnotes / references
[2][3]

Nissin Kogyo(Ngày tin công nghiệp kabushiki gaisha,Nisshin Kōgyō Kabushiki-gaisha)is a Japaneseautomotive partsbrand of vehiclebraking systemsand aluminium products owned by Hitachi Astemo. The company was founded in 1953 and was listed on the first sectionTokyo Stock Exchangeuntil January 2021. As of March 2017, the company had 1.54 billion dollars[3]in revenue and 9,557 employees.[4]Honda Motor Companywas the largest shareholder, owning 34.6 percent of total shares.

Nissin Kogyo is headquartered inNagano,Japan with subsidiary manufacturing plants inOhio,[5]Georgia, USA,[6]Mexico,[7]Brazil,[8]India,[9][10]Indonesia,Thailand,VietnamandChina.[11]

In 2016, Nissin Kogyo created Veoneer-Nissin Brake Systems (VNBS), a joint subsidiary with Swedish automotive safety manufacturerVeoneer.[12][13]

On 30 October 2019, Nissin Kogyo along with 2 other companiesKeihin CorporationandShowa Corporationannounced that they would be merged with Hitachi Automotive Systems to became the new company called Hitachi Astemo.

Further reading

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  • "A Profile of Nissin Kogyo".Japanese Motor Business(9). United Kingdom: Economist Intelligence Unit: 55–62. September 1986.

References

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  1. ^"NISSIN KOGYO|Investor Information|Message from the President".Nissin Kogyo.RetrievedSeptember 10,2020.
  2. ^"Company Overview".Nissin Kogyo. Archived fromthe originalon August 23, 2019.RetrievedMarch 30,2018.
  3. ^ab"Company Profile".Nikkei Asian Review.Nikkei Inc.Archived fromthe originalon September 8, 2017.RetrievedMarch 30,2018.
  4. ^"Annual Review 2017"(PDF).Nissin. March 31, 2017. p. 15. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on September 8, 2017.RetrievedSeptember 7,2017.
  5. ^Staff (September 9, 2015)."Nissin announces joint venture; Findlay workers affected".The Courier.Findlay, Ohio. Archived fromthe originalon July 27, 2018.RetrievedSeptember 7,2017.
  6. ^Omarzo, Tim (December 31, 2013)."Nissin Brake in North Georgia expanding, adding jobs".Chattanooga Times Free Press.RetrievedSeptember 7,2017.
  7. ^Mancera, Ivonne (July 9, 2014)."Nissin Brake Mexico plant inaugurated in Irapuato".Newspaper AM.RetrievedSeptember 7,2017.
  8. ^"Nissin Brake builds new factory in Itú".CIMM Grupo. July 5, 2007.RetrievedSeptember 7,2017.
  9. ^"Japan-based Nissin to invest Rs 64cr for first plant in India".OneIndia.August 21, 2007.RetrievedSeptember 7,2017.
  10. ^Sinha, Ashish (July 27, 2015)."A Cherry Blossom In The Desert".Business World.RetrievedSeptember 7,2017.
  11. ^"NISSIN KOGYO|About Us|Company Overview".Nissin Kogyo.Archived fromthe originalon August 23, 2019.RetrievedSeptember 10,2020.
  12. ^"Wayback Machine has not archived that URL".VNBS.RetrievedSeptember 7,2017.[permanent dead link]
  13. ^"Company Overview".Autoliv-Nissin.RetrievedMarch 3,2017.
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