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Financial holding company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nomura Holdings, Inc. (Japanese: 野村ホールディングス) is a financial holding company and a principal member of the Nomura Group, which is Japan's largest investment bank and brokerage[broken anchor] group.[2] It, along with its broker-dealer, banking and other financial services subsidiaries, provides investment, financing and related services to individual, institutional, and government customers on a global basis with an emphasis on securities businesses.[3]
Romanized name | Nomura Hōrudingusu kabushiki gaisha |
---|---|
Company type | Public KK |
Industry | |
Founded | 25 December 1925 in Osaka, Japan |
Headquarters | 1-9-1, Nihonbashi, Chuo, Tokyo, Japan |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people |
|
Services | |
Revenue | ¥1.56 trillion (2024)[1] |
¥273.9 billion (2024)[1] | |
¥165.9 billion (2024)[1] | |
AUM | ¥89.0 trillion (2024)[1] |
Total assets | ¥55.1 trillion (2024)[1] |
Total equity | ¥3.35 trillion (2024)[1] |
Number of employees | 26,850 (2024)[1] |
Subsidiaries | |
Website | nomura.com |
The history of Nomura began on December 25, 1925, when Nomura Securities Co., Ltd. (NSC) was established in Osaka, as a spin-off from Securities Dept. of Osaka Nomura Bank Co., Ltd (the present day Resona Bank). NSC initially focused on the bond market.[4][5][6] It was named after its founder Tokushichi Nomura II, a wealthy Japanese businessman and investor. He had earlier established Osaka Nomura bank in 1918, based on the Mitsui zaibatsu model with a capital of ¥10 million.[7] Like the majority of Japanese conglomerates, or zaibatsu, its origins were in Osaka, but today operates out of Tokyo. NSC gained the authority to trade stock in 1938, and went public in 1961.
In October 2008, Nomura acquired most of Lehman Brothers' Asian operations together with its European equities and investment banking units to make one of the world's largest independent investment banks with ¥20,300bn (£138bn) assets under management. In April 2009, the global headquarters for investment banking was moved out of Tokyo to London as part of a strategy to move the company's focus from Japan to global markets, with Josh Tokley appointed Head of UK Investments. Following his subsequent suspension, Tokley was replaced by Michael Coombs.
Nomura paid $225 million for the purchase of Lehman's Asia-Pacific unit.[8] Due to large losses with shares dropping to their lowest level in nearly 37 years, Nomura cut around 5 percent of its staff in Europe (as many as 500 people) in mid-September 2011.[9]
In December 2019, Nomura announced that it would acquire Greentech Capital Advisors, a boutique investment bank with stated aims of assisting clients across sustainable technology and infrastructure. The transaction is expected to close on March 31, 2020.[10]
Greentech will be rebranded to "Nomura Greentech" and will form part of their Investment Banking franchise in the U.S.[10]
The marketing slogan of Nomura is "Connecting Markets East & West".[11]
Nomura Holdings, Inc. is the holding company of the Nomura Group and the group's principal member.[12][13] As a keiretsu, Nomura Holdings, Inc. does not directly run member companies, rather it keeps a controlling stake of cross shareholdings and manages financial assistance among member companies which help to deflect hostile takeovers.
Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Financial services Financial management consulting |
Founded | December 25, 1925 (Osaka, Japan) |
Headquarters | Nihonbashi, Chuo, Tokyo, Japan |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Koji Nagai (chairman) Toshio Morita (president) |
Products | Financial services[17] Securities services |
Parent | Nomura Holdings |
Website | Nomura Securities |
Nomura Securities Co., Ltd. is a Japanese financial services company and a wholly owned subsidiary of Nomura Holdings, Inc. (NHI), which forms part of the Nomura Group. It plays a central role in the securities business, the group's core business. Nomura is a financial services group and global investment bank. Based in Tokyo, Japan, with regional headquarters in Hong Kong, London, and New York, Nomura employs about 26,000 staff worldwide; it is known as Nomura Securities International in the US, and Nomura International plc. in EMEA. It operates through five business divisions: retail (in Japan), global markets, investment banking, merchant banking, and asset management.
Established December 25, 1925 in Osaka, it is the oldest brokerage firm in Japan. It is named after its founder Tokushichi Nomura II, a wealthy Japanese businessman and investor.
Nomura was founded by Tokushichi Nomura, father of Nomura Securities founder Tokushichi Nomura II as a money changing business.[18] This was just before the Meiji Restoration, the move to setting up a bank was a logical extension and progression of this business as times changed. Changes included the founding of stock exchanges in Tokyo and Osaka as the country became industrialised. Key amongst these changes was the Japanese government's decision to issue foreign currency denominated public bonds to fund the Russo-Japanese war; Nomura employed English speaking staff so that they could take on this international business.
By 1906 Nomura had founded an in-house research department headed up by former Osaka newspaper journalist Kisaku Hashimoto.[19] This was responsible for publishing the Osaka Nomura Business News with trading news, stock analysis and current economic trends. Research combined with a substantial newspaper advertising campaign helped raise the profile of Nomura. By 1917, Nomura had gone public and soon after Osaka Nomura Bank (the present day Resona Bank) was set up, within this business there was a securities section to handle bond sales and underwriting.[18]
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