Daidouji Holdings Company

Daidoji Holdings, Inc. (大道寺ホールディングス株式会社, Daidōji Hōrudingutsu Kabushikigaisha)(also referred to as "Daidōji Conglomegrate" or simply as "Daidōji Company") is a Japan-based multinational multi-industry company owns by Daidouji's Family Holdings.

As of the end Project Zero-X, the company is responsible for R&D, investments and creation of more than 150 subsidiary brands worldwide, many of which are crucially contributed to the plot of Project Zero-X.

History
Originally founded in 1969 by Tomoyo's mother, Sonomi Daidouji, as a toy company; the company started to expand into the informational technology branch in the late-80s and early-90s as an experiment. Their first in-house products were cellphones that, at the time, were made as competitor against the "GSM International 8700" in 1996, which was the most demanded product at the time. The cellphone, officially known as CCS-11, became a massive commercial success, which led to the company turns the experiment into the primary focus. By the year 2000, the annual earnings of the company skyrocketed by 3000%, bringing the value of the company to ¥1,6 trillion (~$10-billion).

Its diversified products and services include power, industrial and social infrastructure systems, elevators and escalators, electronic components, semiconductors, batteries, lighting, as well as IT solutions such as quantum cryptography which has been in development at Daidōji Research Laboratory in Hong Kong, now being commercialized.

Healthcare programs are also a major point of the company, with many hospitals and emergency health stations are now sponsored/founded by the company.

Key Peoples

 * Tomoyo Daidouji - Executive Chairwomen
 * Sakura Kinomoto-Li - President and CEO
 * Syaoran Kinomoto-Li - COO and Vice President/Executive Director of Hong Kong Branch