Panasonic Corp
Historical Timeline
- 1918 — Konosuke Matsushita founds Matsushita Electric in Osaka (two-prong plug adapter)
- 1927 — National brand launched for bicycle lamps and batteries
- 1955 — Begins TV production; becomes Japan's leading electronics manufacturer
- 1978 — Enters US market aggressively; National/Panasonic brand recognition grows
- 1990 — World's #1 electronics company by revenue (surpassing Sony)
- 2008 — Renamed Panasonic Corporation; brand consolidation
- 2010 — Partners with Tesla on Gigafactory; lithium-ion battery production
- 2023 — $58B revenue; pivoting from consumer electronics to B2B industrial solutions
- 2024 — Expands battery production in Kansas and Nevada; solid-state battery development
Business Model
Panasonic generates $58B annually across: Lifestyle (home appliances, beauty — $12B), Automotive (in-car electronics, batteries — $20B), Connect (avionics, supply chain software — $8B), and Energy (lithium-ion batteries, solar — $18B). The Tesla partnership is central: Panasonic is the exclusive battery cell supplier for Tesla's US-made vehicles, with the Nevada Gigafactory producing 35 GWh annually. The company is investing heavily in solid-state batteries and EV battery recycling. Aviation electronics (Panasonic Avionics) equips 3,500+ commercial aircraft with in-flight entertainment.
Competitive Moat
Panasonic's 100+ year relationship with Tesla creates a switching-cost moat in EV batteries — the Nevada Gigafactory was co-designed and co-invested by both companies. Panasonic Avionics dominates in-flight entertainment (70%+ of commercial aircraft with IFE use Panasonic systems). The company's Japanese manufacturing heritage provides quality reputation in B2B markets. The pivot from consumer electronics to B2B industrial solutions (supply chain software, factory automation, energy storage) positions Panasonic in higher-margin, stickier business segments.
Key Data
- Annual revenue: $58B (FY2023)
- Market cap: ~$25B (TYO: 6752)
- Tesla Gigafactory: 35 GWh annual production (Nevada)
- Aviation: 3,500+ aircraft with Panasonic Avionics IFE
- Employees: ~240,000 globally
Interesting Facts
- Konosuke Matsushita, Panasonic's founder, is called the 'God of Management' in Japan — his philosophy of 'business as a public trust' and the 'water mentality' (products should be as affordable and essential as water) influenced generations of Japanese business leaders.
- The Panasonic name comes from 'pan' (all) and 'sonic' (sound) — originally chosen for audio products in 1955. The company used 'National' as its primary brand in Japan for decades before consolidating to Panasonic globally.