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{{Infobox company
{{Infobox company
| name = Lotte<br>롯데
| name = Lotte<br>롯데<br>ロッテ
| logo = Lotte logo.svg
| logo = Lotte logo.svg
| caption =
| caption =
Line 43: Line 43:
|rr=Rotte
|rr=Rotte
|mr=Rotte
|mr=Rotte
|japanesename = ロッテ
|japanesename=ロッテ
|katakana=ロッテ
|katakana=ロッテ
|hepburn=Rotte
|hepburn=Rotte

Revision as of 15:42, 8 December 2015

Lotte
롯데
ロッテ
Industry
  • food processing
  • retail
  • financial services
  • electronics
  • petro-chemicals
and more
FoundedTokyo, Japan (June 1948 (1948-06))
FounderShin Kyuk-Ho (Takeo Shigemitsu)
Headquarters
Area served
Asia, North America, Europe
Key people
Shin Kyuk-ho, Shin Dongbin
Revenue¥3,931,896 million (2011)[1]
¥328,141 million (2011)[1]
¥191,847 million (2011)[1]
Number of employees
South Korea: 180000
Japan: 5000
Lotte
Korean name
Hangul롯데
Hanja樂天
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationRotte
McCune–ReischauerRotte
Japanese name
Katakanaロッテ

Lotte Co., Ltd. (Korean롯데; Hanja樂天) is a multinational food, chemicals and shopping corporation with headquarters in South Korea and Japan. Lotte was first established in June 1948 in Tokyo, by Takeo Shigemitsu (also known as Shin Kyuk-ho). With the money he earned in Japan, Shin expanded to his home country, South Korea with the establishment of Lotte Confectionery in Seoul on April 3, 1967. Lotte eventually grew to become South Korea's eighth largest business conglomerate.

Lotte Group consists of over 60 business units employing 60,000 people engaged in such diverse industries as candy manufacturing, beverages, hotels, fast food, retail, financial services, heavy chemicals, electronics, IT, construction, publishing, and entertainment. Lotte's major operations are overseen by Shin's family in Japan and South Korea, with additional businesses in China, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, India, USA, UK, Russia, Philippines, Pakistan and Poland (Lotte bought Poland's largest candy company Wedel from Kraft Foods in June 2010). Today, Lotte is the largest confectionery manufacturer in South Korea, and is the third largest in Japan behind Meiji Seika and Ezaki Glico in terms of sales revenue when only the sales of Lotte's confectioneries are counted.

History

Lotte's first company was founded in June 1948 in Tokyo, by Shin Kyuk-ho, two years after he graduated from Waseda Jitsugyo high School ([早稲田実業学校] Error: {{Lang}}: unrecognized language code: jp (help)). Originally called Lotte Co., Ltd, the company has grown from selling chewing gum to children in post-war Japan to becoming a major multinational corporation.

Name

The source of the company's name is neither Korean nor Japanese, but German. Shin was impressed with Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's The Sorrows of Young Werther (1774) and named his newly founded company Lotte after the character Charlotte[2][3] in the novel ("Charlotte" is also the name of a new brand of deluxe movie theatres run by Lotte). Lotte's current marketing slogan in Japan is "The sweetheart of your mouth, Lotte" (お口の恋人,ロッテ, Okuchi no koibito, Rotte).

Management

Lotte Holdings Co., Ltd. – Lotte group's world headquarters – are located in Myeongdong, Seoul and Shinjuku, Tokyo. It is controlled by the founder Shin Kyuk-Ho's family.

Business

Lotte World in Seoul
Lotte Young Shopping Plaza in Daegu, South Korea
Song Seung-Jun, South Korean starting pitcher who plays for the Lotte Giants

Lotte group's major businesses are food products, shopping, finance, construction, amusement parks, hotels, trade, oil and sports.

  • Food Products: Lotte Confectionery, Lotte Chilsung, Lotteria, E Wedel, Lotte Ham/Lotte Milk, Lotte Samkang, Angel-in-us, T.G.I. Friday’s, Swiss Boulagerie, Lotte Cool, Lotte Fresh Delica, Lotte Pharm., Lotte Shopping Food Division
  • Shopping: Lotte Duty Free,[4] Lotte Shopping,[5] Lotte Mart, Lotte Department Store, Lotte-Assi Plaza[6]
  • Entertainment: Lotte Cinema, Lotte Entertainment (investment and distribution of domestic and international films)
  • Finance: Lotte Insurance, Lotte Card, Lotte Capital
  • Housing: Lotte Castle High Rise Apartment Complex
  • Amusement parks: Lotte Cinema, Lotte World in Seoul, one of the world's largest indoor theme parks.
  • Hotels: Lotte Super Tower 123, skyscraper in Seoul, South Korea, 2014 and Busan Lotte Tower skyscraper in Busan, South Korea, 2013, and Lotte City Hotel in Daejeon.
  • Trade: Lotte international[7]
  • IT / Electronics: Korea Fuji Film, Lotte Canon, Lotte IT, Lotte.com, Mobidomi
  • Heavy chemicals / construction / machinery: Honam Petrochemical,[8] KP Chemical,[9] Lotte Engineering & Construction, Lotte Engineering & Machinery, Lotte Aluminum
  • Car rental: Lotte rent-a-car [10]

Sports

Lotte also owns professional baseball teams

Lotte R&D Center

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Report 2011
  2. ^ Lottehotel.com
  3. ^ "Korean Chaebols: Lotte. The Origin of the Lotte Name". Retrieved 20 April 2014.
  4. ^ Chevalier, Michel (2012). Luxury Brand Management. Singapore: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-118-17176-9.
  5. ^ Lotteshopping.com
  6. ^ Lotteplaza.com
  7. ^ Lotteintl.com
  8. ^ HPC.co.kr
  9. ^ KPchem.co.kr
  10. ^ lotterentacar.net