Company DescriptionKYB Corporation manufactures and sells automotive and hydraulic components, and other products worldwide. It offers automotive products, including shock absorbers, hydraulic power steering vane pumps, steering gearbox, motors, dual pinion systems, EPS actuators, and vane pumps; motorcycle components, such as power-regulated front fork and rear cushion unit, shock absorption, front fork, and steering dampers; and railroad equipment, such as caliper brakes, oil dampers, telescopic shock absorbers, suspension system, and automatic height adjustment and differential pressure valves. The company also provides aircraft components comprising actuators, accumulators, wheel brakes, reservoir modules, and reservoirs for space rockets; construction, industrial, and agricultural machinery products consisting of pumps, motors, cylinders, valves, arch cellular communication devices, and integrated HSTs; and special purpose vehicles, including concrete mixer trucks, granule carriers, and tilting drum mixing machines, as well as products for the environment, such as pruned tree shredder trucks, primary crushers, wood crushing type grinding machine, and wood pulverizer. In addition, it provides theater equipment comprising acoustic reflectors, rigging systems, and floor equipment; marine components consisting of stern cranes; and industrial machinery, including axial piston pumps, motion packages, oil and mini buffers, and gas springs. Further, the company offers sports and welfare products, such as chair ski shock absorbers, sports dampers, and vehicle kneeling down systems. The company was formerly known as Kayaba Industry Co., Ltd. and changed its name to KYB Corporation in October 2015. KYB Corporation was founded in 1919 and is headquartered in Tokyo, Japan.
How the Company Makes MoneyKYB makes money primarily by manufacturing and selling components and systems that use its hydraulic and damping technologies. A major revenue stream comes from mobility-related products: selling shock absorbers and related suspension components to automotive manufacturers (OEM supply) for installation in new vehicles, and selling replacement parts through the automotive aftermarket via distributors and parts channels. Another key revenue stream comes from industrial and hydraulic equipment: producing and selling hydraulic components and systems used in machinery and equipment (including applications tied to construction and industrial markets), where revenue is generated through unit sales and, in some cases, project-based deliveries depending on customer specifications. Across these businesses, earnings are influenced by production volumes, vehicle production and replacement demand, pricing and product mix (higher-value products and specialized applications), raw-material and manufacturing costs, and the company’s ability to maintain long-term supply relationships with automakers and industrial customers. Specific details on significant partnerships are null.