Kowa (company)

Kowa Company, Ltd. (興和株式会社) is a Japanese specialized trading company and manufacturer. Its headquarters are located in Nagoya, the capital of Japan's Aichi prefecture.

Overview
Kowa Company is the core of the umbrella Kowa Group. Other companies within the group include Kowa's sibling firm and the consolidated subsidiary. Its predecessor, Hattori Kensaburo Shoten, notably supported the industrialist Sakichi Toyoda's development of his automatic loom. The business is divided into trading and manufacturing divisions. The trading company division trades in fibers, machines, building materials, watercraft, mineral resources, chemical materials, and everyday goods. Meanwhile, the manufacturing division produces medicine, medical equipment, optical instruments, and energy-saving products.

Marketing of Kowa medical products under such brand names as Colgen Kowa and Cabagin Kowa via nationwide TV commercials increased the company's brand recognition. The company also manufactures and sells Prominar-brand camera lenses, spotting scopes, and video equipment that is used by NHK and various commercial TV and radio stations.

Kowa is the largest shareholder in both and, with which it shares cross ownership. The company also owned the now-defunct radio station RADIO-i.

Predecessor company

 * 1894: Fiber wholesaler Hattori Kensaburo Shoten (服部兼三郎商店) is established in Nagoya
 * 1912: Reorganized and established as a corporation, Hattori Shoten Co., Ltd. (株式会社服部商店)
 * 1919: Added a spinning operation
 * 1920: Founder Hattori Kensaburo kills himself at age 51 after facing bankruptcy

Current corporation

 * 1939: Trading division separated and established as Kaneka Hattori Shoten Company, Ltd.
 * 1943: Name changed to Kofu Sangyo Company, Ltd.
 * 1945: Expanded beyond textiles
 * 1960: Name changed to Kowa Company, Ltd.

Promotion
Kowa's mascot is a frog often referred to as Kero-chan. In 2020, Kowa acquired the naming rights for a Nagoya baseball stadium, now known as the Vantelin Dome Nagoya, after one of its pharmaceutical products.