Subaru
#1472
Rank
$12.63B
Marketcap
Japan
Country
Mr. Tomomi Nakamura (Pres, CEO & Representative Director)
Mr. Katsuyuki Mizuma (Exec. VP, CFO, Chief Risk Management Officer & Director)
Tetsuo Fujinuki (Sr. VP, CTO and Chief GM of Engineering Management Div. & Technical Research Center)
Summary
History
Fuji Heavy Industries and Subaru's first cars
Fuji Heavy Industries started out as the Aircraft Research Laboratory in 1915, headed by Chikuhei Nakajima. In 1932, the company was reorganized as Nakajima Aircraft Company, Ltd and soon became a major manufacturer of aircraft for Japan during World War II. At the end of the Second World War, Nakajima Aircraft was again reorganized, this time as Fuji Sangyo Co, Ltd. In 1946, the company created the Fuji Rabbit, a motor scooter, with spare aircraft parts from the war. In 1950, Fuji Sangyo was divided into 12 smaller corporations according to the Japanese government's 1950 anti-zaibatsu legislation, the Corporate Credit Rearrangement Act. Between 1953 and 1955, five of these corporations and a newly formed corporation decided to merge to form Fuji Heavy Industries. These companies were: Fuji Kogyo, a scooter manufacturer; coachbuilder Fuji Jidosha; engine manufacturer Omiya Fuji Kogyo; chassis builder Utsunomiya Sharyo and the Tokyo Fuji Sangyo trading company.
Kenji Kita, CEO of Fuji Heavy Industries at the time, wanted the new company to be involved in car manufacturing and soon began plans for building a car with the development code-name P-1. Kita canvassed the company for suggestions about naming the P1, but none of the proposals were appealing enough. In the end he gave the company a Japanese name that he "had been cherishing in his heart": Subaru, which is the Japanese name for the Pleiades star cluster. The first Subaru car was named the Subaru 1500. Only twenty were manufactured owing to multiple supply issues. Subsequently, the company designed and manufactured dozens of vehicles including the 1500 , the tiny air-cooled 360 , the Sambar , and the 1000 .
Later partnerships
Nissan acquired a 20.7% stake in Fuji Heavy Industries, Subaru's parent company, in 1968 during a period of government-ordered merging of the Japanese auto industry in order to improve competitiveness under the administration of Prime Minister Eisaku Sat?. Nissan would utilize FHI's bus manufacturing capability and expertise for their Nissan Diesel line of buses. In turn many Subaru vehicles, even today, use parts from the Nissan manufacturing keiretsu. The Subaru automatic transmission, known as the 4EAT, is also used in the first generation Nissan Pathfinder. While under this arrangement with Nissan, Subaru introduced the R-2 , the Rex and the Leone , the BRAT , Alcyone , the Legacy , the Impreza , and the Forester .
Upon Nissan's alliance with Renault, its stake in FHI was sold to General Motors in 1999. Troy Clarke of General Motors served as representative to Fuji Heavy Industries on their corporate board. During that time, Subaru introduced the Baja , and the Tribeca . The Subaru Forester was sold as a Chevrolet Forester in India in exchange for the Opel Zafira being sold as a Subaru Traviq in Japan. Also, the Chevrolet Borrego concept was presented in 2002, a crossover coupe/pickup truck being derived from the Japanese-market Legacy Turbo platform. During the brief General Motors period, a badge engineered Impreza was sold in the United States as the Saab 9-2X. An SUV was also planned but the Saab version did not proceed, and styling was recycled in the 2008 Tribeca refresh.GM liquidated their holdings in FHI in 2005. Nearly all Saab-Subaru joint projects were dropped at that time, other than Subaru supplying parts for the Saab 9-2x. Toyota Motors bought a little over 40% of GM's former FHI stock, amounting to 8.7% of FHI.
Toyota and Subaru have since collaborated on a number of projects, among them building the Toyota Camry in Subaru's Indiana U.S. plant beginning in April 2007. Subaru introduced the Exiga in 2008.
Toyota increased their share of FHI to 16.5% in July 2008. Subsequently, Toyota and Subaru jointly developed the Subaru BRZ, first sold in January 2012. Toyota sold the BRZ as the Scion FR-S until 2018, where it was renamed to the Toyota 86 due to the discontinuation of Scion in 2016. Around the time of Toyota's increased ownership, Subaru also declared that they would no longer develop their own Kei cars and trucks, instead selling rebadged products from Toyota's Daihatsu subsidiary. This also allowed Subaru, a small manufacturer, to focus on their core of boxer-engined family cars. The last of Subaru's own kei vehicles to be built was the sixth generation Subaru Sambar, which was taken out of production in March 2012 after 54 years of continuous manufacturing in this category.
Marketing
Some of the advertising slogans Subaru has used in the past include: "Inexpensive, and built to stay that way" , "The World's Favourite Four Wheel Drive" , "Plus on y pense, plus on a le goût de la conduire" in French Quebec, "We built our reputation by building a better car", "What to Drive", "The Beauty of All-Wheel Drive", "Driven by What's Inside", "Think, Feel, Drive", "Love. It's what makes Subaru, a Subaru" and currently "Confidence in Motion" in North America, "All 4 The Driver" in Australia, "Uncommon Engineering, Uncommon Stability, Uncommon Roadholding, Uncommon Sense" in the UK and "Technology that gives you Confidence in Motion" in Southeast Asia.In the 1990s, an ad firm hired by Subaru found the all-wheel-drive cars were popular among lesbians. The company started including subtle marketing to this demographic.According to Automotive Lease Guide, Subaru ranked second place in vehicles that have the highest overall predicted resale values among all industry and all luxury vehicles for MY 2009. The awards are derived after carefully studying segment competition, historical vehicle performance and industry trends. According to a study done by J.D. Power and Associates for the 2008 Customer Retention Study, Subaru ranked at 50.5%, which was above the national average of 48%.Subaru launched an animation series Wish Upon the Pleiades H?kago no Pleiades developed jointly with Gainax. The 4-part mini episode series was released on YouTube on 1 February 2011. It featured a magical girl plot with Subaru as a leading protagonist.
Mission
Vision
Key Team
Mr. Tetsuo Onuki (Exec. VP, Chief GM of Purchasing Division & Director)
Mr. Shoichiro Tozuka (Sr. VP)
Takuji Dai (Exec. VP, Chief Info Officer, Chief GM of IT Strategy Div. & Sr. GM of Corp. Planning Div.)
Mr. Fumiaki Hayata (Exec. VP, Chief GM of Overseas Sales & Marketing Division 1 and Director)
Yasushi Nagae (VP, GM of IR Dept., Gen. Admin Dept., Corp. Communications Dept. & Sustainability Promotion Dept.)
Mr. Atsushi Osaki (Exec. VP, Chief GM of Manufacturing Division & Director)
Tatsuro Kobayashi (Sr. VP & GM of HR Dept)
Recognition and Awards
References
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Mr. Tomomi Nakamura (Pres, CEO & Representative Director)
Mr. Katsuyuki Mizuma (Exec. VP, CFO, Chief Risk Management Officer & Director)
Tetsuo Fujinuki (Sr. VP, CTO and Chief GM of Engineering Management Div. & Technical Research Center)