DKB Group

The DKB Group (第一勧銀グループ) 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. Two of DKB's largest clients, Kawasaki Heavy Industries and Furukawa Electric, led their own respective corporate groups with a cross-supply relationship between the two. The Kawasaki and Furukawa groups agreed to begin holding presidents' meetings in 1966.[2] Itochu, which historically supplied Kawasaki with raw materials, became the main general trading company for the combined group.[3]

The group's presidents began regular Sankin-kai (三金会) meetings in 1971. Also in that year, the group's name developed from the merger of Dai-Ichi Bank and Nippon Kangyo Bank.[1] In 1998, an announcement was made that the Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank was to be merged with Fuji Bank and the Industrial Bank of Japan to form Mizuho Financial Group.[4] The resulting group, which was established in September 2000,[5] was the largest banking group in the world with assets of 140 trillion yen.[4][6] The next few years saw a parallel consolidation of their keiretsu industrial partners[4] and saw the group grow to 150 trillion yen in assets (30% GDP).[5]

Companies

See also

References

  1. Richard L. Carson, Baerbel M. Traynor. Comparative Economic Systems: Transition and capitalist alternatives M.E. Sharpe, 1998^
  2. Annual Report 1998 Mizuho Financial Group, retrieved 16 October 2024^
  3. Shinichi Suzuki. The Japanese Main Bank System: A Transaction Cost Approach 2006^
  4. Asli M. Colpan, Takashi Hikino, James R Lincoln. The Oxford Handbook of Business Groups Oxford Handbooks Online, 2010^
  5. Benton E. Gup. Too big to fail: policies and practices in government bailouts Greenwood Publishing Group, 2004^
  6. Sung-Jo Park, Arne Holzhausen. Can Japan globalize? Springer, 2001^