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keiretsu

American  
[key-ret-soo] / keɪˈrɛt su /

noun

plural

keiretsu
  1. (especially in Japan) a loose coalition of business groups.


Etymology

Origin of keiretsu

Borrowed into English from Japanese around 1975–80

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

This could breed “risks similar to past periods of exuberance such as 1980’s keiretsu in Japan and Dot.Com’s ‘vendor financing’ schemes,” he says.

From MarketWatch

Keiretsu is the name given to Japan’s networks of companies linked by mutual shareholdings.

From MarketWatch

The Japanese auto industry used to draw strengths from its decades-old keiretsu system - a hierarchical pyramid of equity-interlocked suppliers with automakers sitting atop and ensuring business security.

From Reuters

Automakers might not be able to support all kinds of keiretsu companies anymore, Terasaka said, adding that he anticipated changes to how the keiretsu system operated.

From Reuters

The powerful trading houses are some of Japan’s oldest and biggest companies and the anchors of vast industrial groups called keiretsu.

From Washington Times