Trading Companies
Japan's trading companies—the 'sogo shosha'—are unique conglomerates that combine commodity trading, project development, long-term equity investment, and supply chain services across virtually every industry and geography. These companies serve as Japan's commercial interface with the global economy, acting as investment holding companies as much as traditional traders.
Trading companies are actively repositioning portfolios toward energy transition, digital infrastructure, and food security assets. The shift from fossil fuel investments toward renewable energy, battery materials, and sustainable food systems reflects both ESG considerations and long-term commercial opportunity—areas where the sogo shosha's deal origination and project development capabilities create durable advantages.
Simple average of constituent stock price changes vs. previous close. Not a sector index.
The sogo shosha model creates highly diversified earnings streams through commodity trading revenues combined with dividend and capital gains income from vast equity portfolios spanning energy, metals, agriculture, infrastructure, and consumer goods. Warren Buffett's high-profile investments in Japanese trading companies brought renewed global attention to this distinctive business model.