Bandai Namco Holdings

For the video game publisher and developer, see Bandai Namco Entertainment.
For other uses, see Bandai Namco.
Bandai Namco Holdings Inc.
Native name
株式会社バンダイナムコホールディングス
Kabushiki Gaisha Bandai Namuko Hōrudingusu
Public
Traded as TYO: 7832
Industry Entertainment
Predecessor
Founded Tokyo, Japan September 29, 2005 (2005-09-29)
Headquarters Shinagawa, Tokyo, Japan
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
  • Shukuo Ishikawa Chairman, CEO
  • Mitsuaki Taguchi President, COO
Products
Revenue Increase ¥565.5 billion[1] (2015)
Increase ¥56.321B[1] (2015)
Increase ¥37.589B[1] (2015)
Total assets Increase ¥441.764B[1] (2015)
Total equity Increase ¥303.513B[1] (2015)
Owners

[1]

Number of employees
7.221K[1] (2015)
Subsidiaries See list
Website www.bandainamco.co.jp/en/

Bandai Namco Holdings Inc. (BNHD) (株式会社バンダイナムコホールディングス Kabushiki Gaisha Bandai Namuko Hōrudingusu), also known as the Bandai Namco Group, is a Japanese holding company which was formed from the merger of Namco and Bandai on September 29, 2005.[2] It specializes in toys, video games, arcades, anime, and amusement parks. The company's headquarters are based in Shinagawa, Tokyo.[3] Their US branch, Bandai Namco Holdings USA, was officially formed on January 6, 2008, and handles the US operations of the company from their headquarters in Cypress, California.[4]

The main business of Bandai Namco Holdings consists of the design and implementation of management strategies for the conglomerate and providing support for the overall business of its subsidiaries. It's task is to bring Namco and Bandai into one organized brand. Namco Bandai also supply various arcade machines to movie theaters and arcades across the globe.[3]

Corporate history

Bandai

Main article: Bandai § History

Bandai started in the 1950 as a toy manufacturing company in Japan. During the 1960's, Bandai expanded their business portfolio to include export sales. The 1970's provided Bandai with success through their racing car sets. Bandai established Bandai America Inc. in 1978 in order to have a sales and marketing distributor for western markets. By the 1980's, Bandai was Japan's leading toy company and consumer product licensor for popular franchises such as Power Rangers and Digimon. During the late 1990's, Sega expressed an interest in merging with Bandai, however, plans fell through for this merger due to corporal cultural differences.

Namco

Main article: Namco § History

Namco started in 1955 as a children's entertainment company in Japan under the name Nakamura Manufacturing. In 1958, They eventually expanded their business by manufacturing arcade machines, and through a company reorganization, the company was renamed to Nakamura Amusement Machine Manufacturing Company, through the acronym "NAMCO". In 1974, Namco purchased Atari Inc. Japan for $500'000 including liabilities. The purpose of this acquisition was for a capital injection for Atari Japan in exchange for Namco to be a publisher for Atari games in Japan. In 1978, Namco created a subsidiary in the United States in order to license Namco games to western publishers.

Namco's first debut into the video game industry was through a game called Gee Bee. Their second debut, Galaxian was the first video game to project RGB color spectrum. It was on their third arcade debut, Pac-Man, that Namco gained worldwide acclaim and pop culture relevancy, and as a result, made Pac-Man the definitive mascot for the company. Namco continued their success in the video gaming industry by contributing to the Golden Age of arcades and home console gaming with notable franchises such as Tekken, Soul and Tales.

Merger

Namco Bandai Holdings was created in 2005, when Bandai and Namco performed a management integration,[5] 57% percent of the company's holding went to Bandai while 43% went to Namco. Furthermore, Bandai swapped one of its shares for 1.5 of the new Namco Bandai. Namco traded evenly with a one-for-one share,[6] carried out via a share exchange. The shareholders of Namco received one NBHD share for each Namco share and the shareholders of Bandai received 1.5 NBHD shares for each Bandai share.[2] Prior to the merger, Bandai and Namco had various subsidiaries that worked under them. After the merger of Bandai Namco, the respective Bandai and Namco subsidiaries were re-designated into different areas of the combined conglomerate.

Acquisitions and subsidiaries

In September 2006, BNHD acquired CCP Co., Ltd. from Casio and made it a wholly owned subsidiary.[7][8] NBHD have since fully acquired developers Banpresto (whose video game operations were absorbed into Namco Bandai Games on April 1, 2008)[9] and Namco Tales Studio since the merger. Formerly, both were partially owned by Bandai and Namco respectively. On March 31, 2006, Namco and Bandai's video game operations merged into Namco Bandai Games Inc. (NBGI). Namco's arcade and facility management continue under the name of Namco Ltd. The business of Bandai Networks Co., Ltd. was merged into Namco Bandai Games in April 2009 and Bandai Networks subsequently ceased to exist as a separate company.[10] Namco Bandai bought a 34% stake in Atari Europe on May 14, 2009, paving the way for its acquisition from Infogrames.[11] Until June 30, 2012, Infogrames had the option to sell the other 66% in Atari Europe to NBHD.[12] Between June 31, 2012, to June 20, 2013, Namco Bandai gained the option to acquire the 66% stake.[13] On the 7th of July 2009, Namco Bandai Holdings bought 100% of Atari Australia Pty Ltd. NBHD acquired 100% of the shares of Atari Asia Holdings Pty. Ltd. and 100% of the shares of Atari UK Ltd.[14] These former Atari companies were merged into Namco Bandai Partners to handle distribution and publishing support in PAL territories, including contracts for other publishers' titles. Namco Bandai took over D3 Publisher on March 18, 2009,[15] after first acquiring a 95% stake in the company.[16] In August 2013, Namco Bandai opened a studio in Vancouver, broadening its reach for western demographics.[17]

Organization

NBHD is organized into three Strategic Business Units, supplemented by Affiliated Business Companies that provide logistical support.[18] The SBUs consist of Toys & Hobby, Content (video games, anime, and recording), and Amusement Facilities (theme parks).

Organizational history

The organization of BNHD has changed considerably since the merger. In 2007, NBHD consisted of 5 SBUs (strategic business unit) and the Affiliated Business Companies.[19] In April 2009, the Game Contents SBU and the Network SBU were merged,[20] and since April 2010, NBHD has consisted of three SBUs and the Affiliated Business Companies.[21]

Toys & Hobby SBU

The Toys & Hobby SBU is mainly made up of the former Bandai's toy-making facilities and regional subsidiaries.[22][23]

Content SBU

The Content SBU is responsible for all video game products, including games for home consoles, arcades, mobile platforms,[24] and anime production and distribution. The bulk of these facilities are made up by the former Namco, also with Banpresto, D3 Publisher and the Sunrise anime production company, along with the following:

Asia

Bandai Namco Holdings - Content SBU Asia
Parent Company Subsidiary Location Notes
Bandai Namco Entertainment Bandai Namco Games Tokyo, Japan Merged from video game development divisions of Bandai and Namco in 2006.
Bandai Namco Studios Tokyo, Japan
Bandai Namco Entertainment Asia Bandai Namco Entertainment Asia Singapore
Bandai Namco Games Korea South Korea
Bandai Namco Games Taiwan Taiwan
Bandai Namco Games HK (Hong Knog) Hong Kong
Bandai Namco Studios Singapore Singapore
D3 Publisher D3 Publisher Japan Founded in 1992. Acquired in 2009.
Vicious Cycle Software
Cellius Tokyo, Japan Founded in 2007.
Bandai Visual Bandai Visual Shiodome, Minato, Tokyo, Japan
Lantis
Bandai Entertainment
Bandai Visual USA (Honneǎmise)
Beez Entertainment (European branch of Bandai Entertainment)
Emotion
Bandai Namco Pictures
Bandai Channel
Sunrise
Sunrise Music Publishing
Sunrise Interactive
Sunrise USA
Bandai Namco Pictures
Animax Broadcast Japan Inc. (joint venture between Sony Pictures Entertainment, Toei Animation, TMS Entertainment and Nihon Ad Systems)

America

Europe

Bandai Namco Holdings - Content SBU Europe
Parent Company Subsidiary Location Notes
Bandai Namco Games Europe Bandai Namco Games Europe
Bandai Namco Games France Cergy-Pontoise, France
Bandai Namco Games Hellas (Greece) Alexandroupoli, Greece
Bandai Namco Games Nordic Stockholm, Sweden
Bandai Namco Games Portugal
Bandai Namco Games Iberica Madrid, Spain
Bandai Namco Games Germany Frankfurt, Germany
Bandai Namco Games UK (United Kingdom) London, England
Bandai Namco Games Romania Bucharest, Romania
Beez Entertainment

Oceania

Former subsidiaries

Amusement Facility SBU

The Amusement Facility SBU oversees the company's theme parks and the management of its own arcades, most of which were acquired through the merger with Namco.

Affiliated Business Companies

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "2015 Annual Financial Statement" (PDF). Bandai-Namco.
  2. 1 2 Bandai, Namco to merge in Sept to form Japan's No 3 toy, game group - UPDATE 2, Forbes.com, 5 February 2005, archived from the original on 14 August 2011, retrieved 20 December 2010
  3. 1 2 "Corporate Data | About Company | BANDAI NAMCO Holdings". Bandainamco.co.jp. Retrieved 2014-06-28.
  4. Namco Bandai Holdings (USA) Inc. introduction, Bandai Namco, retrieved 4 August 2010
  5. "NAMCO BANDAI Games America Inc. – News". Web.archive.org. Archived from the original on 2010-06-24. Retrieved 2016-03-08.
  6. "Tekken's worldwide domination continues as it goes online for the first time on the PlayStation 3 system". Namco Bandai Games America Inc. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
  7. "NAMCO BANDAI Holdings Inc. Announces Acquisition of CCP Co., Ltd.". Reuters. 2006-09-12. Retrieved 2010-12-31.
  8. About Company - History, Namco Bandai Holdings Inc., retrieved 31 December 2010
  9. "Games, reviews, previews, nieuws, tips, video's en trailers - IGN Benelux". Uk.games.ign.com. Retrieved 2014-06-28.
  10. "About Company - History". Namco Bandai Holdings Inc. Retrieved 2010-12-31.
  11. "Namco Bandai To Swallow Atari Europe". Edge. 2009-05-14. Archived from the original on 2015-07-23. Retrieved 2009-05-30.
  12. Schilling, Mark (2008-09-10). "Namco Bandai buys Infogrames stake". Reed Business Information. Retrieved 2011-01-23.
  13. "Infogrames And Namco Bandai's Europe Joint Venture". kotaku.com. Retrieved 2011-01-23.
  14. "Namco Bandai Holdings Inc. Fully Acquires Three Companies". Reuters. 2009-11-05. Retrieved 2010-12-11.
  15. "D3 Publosher Addresses Namco Bandai takeover - Edge Magazine". Web.archive.org. 2009-03-18. Archived from the original on 2012-05-31. Retrieved 2016-03-08.
  16. "Namco Bandai Acquires D3 Publisher | News | Edge Online". Web.archive.org. 2009-03-18. Archived from the original on April 4, 2013. Retrieved 2016-03-08.
  17. "Namco Bandai Opens Social Gaming Development Studio In Vancouver". Vending Times. September 1, 2013. Retrieved September 4, 2013.
  18. "BANDAI NAMCO Group | BANDAI NAMCO Holdings". Bandainamco.co.jp. Retrieved 2014-06-28.
  19. Namco Bandai Holdings Inc. Annual Report 2007 (PDF), Namco Bandai Holdings, retrieved 21 December 2010
  20. Namco Bandai Holdings Inc. Annual Report 2009 (PDF), Namco Bandai Holdings, retrieved 21 December 2010
  21. Namco Bandai Holdings Inc. Annual Report 2010 (PDF), Namco Bandai Holdings, retrieved 21 December 2010
  22. Toys and Hobby, Namco Bandai, retrieved 19 October 2010
  23. Global Development, Bandai, retrieved 19 October 2010
  24. "Game Contents | Strategic Business Units |NAMCO BANDAI Holdings". Web.archive.org. 2009-04-04. Archived from the original on April 4, 2009. Retrieved 2016-03-08.

External links

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