Japanese companies - Sōgō shōsha rising

Components Performance/Risk
Period Return
43.9%
Return Rank
Strong
Risk Exposure
Average Risk

The sōgō shōsha – giant conglomerates operating in – and just as significantly out of – Japan – have been known as international trading houses, extremely diversified and supporting Japanese manufacturers' international transactions, particularly in the textile and chemical industries in the early years of expansion

As these manufacturers grew in size, taking on an active role in international procurement and finance, the sōgō shōsha shifted their focus by investing upstream, relying on their deep knowledge of the numerous supply chains they used to trade – with the intent to consolidate their comparative advantage

The investment strategy of the firms spun a dense network of approx. 6 000 subsidiaries, mostly by way of minority holdings, across the world, growing in influence by dint of shared technological expertise and financial power

Utilities, always an integral part of the supply chains, brought infrastructure investment into focus, on the domestic market and internationally, extending the reach of the conglomerates from equipment to research (such as water desalination) to consumer services

Water utilities are a case in point, with concentration on emerging markets (Middle East, Latin America and South East Asia), where industrialization, urbanization and growing middle classes will fast-track growth

In a long-term perspective, the investment of Berkshire in 5 of the 8 sōgō shōsha, aiming to reach 9.9% ownership over time, finds a precise justification in the same

The sōgō shōsha  in Berkshire's portfolio are Itochu , Marubeni , Mitsubishi , Mitsui and Sumitomo

Not coincidentally, two sōgō which are not part of Berkshire's portfolio seem to be ignored by international investors and remain poorly traded  OTC - $22 billion Toyota Tsuho and more recently established $4.3 billion Sojitz 

Three large industrial companies are included in the selection as benchmarks - industrial machinery manufacturer Keyence , industrial conglomerate Hitachi Ltd   and Shin-Etsu Chemical  

 

Since the companies are often very loosely traded on OTC markets, their performance will usually reflect the trend but not the actual performance on their home market, adjusted for currency shifts -  their track record  on OTC is strictly informative and will justify further research

With low trading volume on U.S. OTC markets  for the listed shares, performancevolatility and drawdown calculations will be affected - these ratios do not reflect true performance, volatility and drawdown as these same shares are normally traded on their national exchange

 

Our platform of asset information unfortunately does not will include fundamental data information for OTC (over-the-counter) quoted firms 

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