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Imperial Navy Shipyard

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Capital StrategyCorporation as Conscience-Free Machine
Capital StrategyControl Wealth, Don't Just Own It
Cornerstone MoveGovernment Steel In, Foreign Flag Out
Cornerstone MoveCharter First, Build With Their Credit
Strategic PatternCargo Creates the Need for Ships
Risk DoctrinePrivate Companies Beyond Government Eyes
Signature MovePay Yourself Through Your Own Companies
Capital StrategyFloat Capital as Free Leverage
Signature MovePaper Clip Frugality as Operating Religion
Signature MoveYacht Diplomacy to Close Charters
Signature MoveFrontier Ventures Where No One Else Will Go

Primary Evidence

"But his shipyard at Norfolk was becoming too cramped for the large ships Ludwig planned to build. In 1951 he was able to make a deal with the occupation government in Japan to lease the former Imperial Navy Shipyard at Kure, where many of the largest war vessels had been built, and move most of his shipbuilding operation there. There were plenty of workers eager for jobs at any wage. While he built tankers, he was also experimenting with other kinds of vessels, mainly self-unloading vessels for hauling dry cargo — iron ore, coal, and other minerals — or versatile bulk carriers able to haul either ore or petroleum. To help provide cargo for his ships, he diversified into other activities — mining, ranching, timber grow¬ ing, oil refining, salt production — and became a major supplier of many commodities to Japan, producing as well as hauling raw materials from South America, Australia, and other areas where he had established projects."

Source:The Invisible Billionaire, Daniel Ludwig

Appears In Volumes