Nidec Precision Philippines Corporation is established as an in-house parts manufacturing base for HDD spindle motors.
The production of fans for cooling car seats starts.
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Chapter 4 (2001-2005)
Jan.
Nidec Precision Philippines Corporation is established as an in-house parts manufacturing base for HDD spindle motors.
The production of fans for cooling car seats starts.
Apr.
A full-scale production of FDB motors starts at Nidec Philippines Corporation.
Sep.
The company’s power supply business is transferred to Nipron Co., Ltd.
Nidec Is Listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
more
Oct.
Taiwan Technical Center is established in Nidec Taiwan Corporation.
The production of HDD spindle motors ends, and a die business starts at Nidec (Dalian) Ltd.
Apr.
Nidec System Engineering (Zhejiang) Corporation is established in the city of Pinghu, China, as a production base for HDD spindle motors.
The company merges with Nidec Electronics Corporation to form Tottori Technical Center.
A full-scale production of FDB motors starts at Nidec Singapore Pte. Ltd.
Jun.
Nidec (Dongguan) Ltd. is established in China as a production base for brushless DC motors.
Feb.
Nidec (Shanghai) International Trading Co., Ltd., is established as a locally-incorporated company.
Mar.
The construction of the new head office building and Central Technical Laboratory in Minami-ku, Kyoto, is completed.
The production of large fans for cell phone base stations and other telecommunications equipment starts.
May
The Central Research Laboratory merges with other research facilities to form the Central Technical Laboratory.
The company issues stock options (subscription rights) to its directors and employees.
Business Operations Start in the New Head Office Building.
more
May
Celebrations Are Held to Mark the Completion of the New Building.
more
Jul.
A Ceremony Is Held to Commemorate the 30th Anniversary of the Company's Founding.
more
Oct.
Nidec Takes a Stake in Sankyo Seiki Manufacturing Co., Ltd.
more
Apr.
Sankyo Logistics is renamed Nidec Logistics Corporation.
Jun.
The company revises its environmental philosophy and establishes an environmental policy to enhance environmental management system, and issues Environmental Report, the predecessor to the CSR Report.
Apr.
The Construction of the South Building of Nidec Tokyo Building Is Completed. The Motor Engineering Research Laboratory Is Established.
more
Jun.
The construction of Nidec Group Precision Processing Center is completed in the city of Nagaokakyo, Kyoto Prefecture.
Oct.
Nidec Vietnam Corporation, a locallyincorporated company, is established.
September 2001
Since the end of the 1990s, Nidec had been restructuring its group companies from affiliates under the equity method to consolidated subsidiaries, and in 2001, the company started consolidated management. On September 27, 2001 (local time), the company was listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). It was the 15th Japanese company to achieve this feat. The trading code was “NJ,” and the initial price was $34.50 at 9:30 a.m. on the day of listing.
Incidentally, just days before the listing, on September 11, the terrorist attacks on the United States occurred. Prior to the listing, the company donated $100,000 to The NYSE Fallen Heroes Fund to show its respect for the NYPD and firefighters who were killed in the terrorist attacks.
In April 2004, three years after listing on the NYSE, the company and its 110-plus consolidated group companies switched their accounting procedures to US-GAAP.
May 2003
In 2003, the 30th anniversary of the company’s founding, the company relocated its head office functions to a new head office building just completed at the end of March, and began operations on May 6, 2003 as the new head office and Central Technical Laboratory. The new building, with a site area of 18,650 m2 and a total floor area of 37,960 m2, has 22 stories above ground and two below, and is located on a vast 22,000 m2 site spanning Kuze, Minami-ku, Kyoto, and Morimoto-cho, Muko, both in Kyoto Prefecture. The exterior of the building, which resembles a space shuttle, is composed of a high-rise building, the tallest in Kyoto at 100.6 m, and a low-rise building lined with laboratory buildings, and has attracted attention as a new landmark in the ancient capital of Kyoto.
It took more than two years to complete from the acquisition of the site in March 1998 to the start of construction in July 2000. This was due to a pre-construction excavation survey that revealed the construction site to be part of the Nagaokakyo area, which contains buried cultural properties, and the design thus had to be changed.
May 2003
On May 20, 2003, prior to the company’s 30th anniversary ceremony, a celebration and buffet party were held to mark the completion of the new head office and Central Technical Laboratory. The event was attended by approximately 300 guests, including Keiji Yamada, Governor of Kyoto Prefecture; Yorikane Masumoto, Mayor of Kyoto; Junichi Murata, Chairman of the Kyoto Chamber of Commerce and Industry; Seiichi Asaka, President of NSK Ltd.; Kazuo Inamori, Chairman Emeritus of Kyocera Corporation; and other guests associated with Kyoto. At the celebration, Nagamori expressed his enthusiasm, saying, “We are still not worthy of our new building, and we will do our best to ensure that everyone will think of us as worthy of it.”
July 2003
On July 23, 2003, Nidec celebrated its 30th anniversary. To commemorate the occasion, a ceremony was held in the main hall of the new building on July 20, 2003, with 350 people in attendance, including executives, managers, long-service and outstanding employee award recipients, and representatives of the friendship committee of each business site.
In his address, Nagamori analyzed the factors behind the company’s growth to date, and while praising the employees, emphasized that this was a milestone in the process of growth. In response, employees also celebrated the 30th anniversary of the company’s founding and pledged to work together to achieve their goals without falling prey to the so-called “big company disease.”
After the ceremony, a family tour of the new company building was held, attended by nearly 700 employees and their families, who enjoyed a pleasant time in a friendly atmosphere.
In October of the same year, Nidec’s 30-year history, The Bold Challenge, was published.
October 2003
Sankyo Seiki Manufacturing Co., Ltd. is a prestigious Nagano Prefecture company known for its music boxes. In the 1990s, the company expanded its business to include precision motors, optical components, and factory automation equipment, and had become a global company with sales of over 100 billion yen. However, since 2000, the company had suffered from deteriorating business performance and had been in the red for two consecutive fiscal years. Having long been interested in the company’s technology, in October 2003, Nidec underwrote a third-party allocation of new shares to acquire a 50% equity stake in the company. In addition, Nagamori implemented a thorough 3Q6S program, cut costs by improving attendance, reducing expenses, and strengthening purchasing power, and developed restructuring activities with the support of group companies. In fiscal 2006, when the company changed its name to Nidec Sankyo Corporation, it recorded its highest ever sales and returned to profitability.
Incidentally, Nagamori decided to fully support the company’s skating club when he took a stake in the company, and the group as a whole backed the club until it was discontinued in March 2022.
April 2005
In July 2003, the 30th anniversary of Nidec’s founding, the company built a new building and the Central Technical Laboratory. Two years later, in 2005, Nidec built Nidec Tokyo Bldg. (South Bldg.) to consolidate the offices of its affiliates, and established the Motor Engineering Research Laboratory to conduct basic research in anticipation of the next 10 to 20 years.
As a result, Nidec had five R&D bases: the Nagano Technical Center (spindle motors for HDDs), the Shiga Technical Center (small brushless DC motors and medium-sized motors for automotive use), and the Tottori Technical Center (fans), in addition to the Central Technical Laboratory and the Motor Engineering Research Laboratory. The five R&D bases, each specializing in a particular field, were designed to increase the efficiency and speed of technological development.
The concept of the Motor Engineering Research Laboratory was a world-class motor research and development center that is worthy of being the world’s leading comprehensive motor manufacturer. Nagamori raised the R&D budget and allocated it to basic motor research, saying, “In the future, we will do it with the intention of producing a Nobel Prize winner from here.”