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When a regulator anywhere in the world measures what comes out of a car’s tailpipe, the machine doing the measuring is almost certainly made by Horiba. The Kyoto company holds an estimated 80% global share in automotive emissions analyzers — and quietly turned that single dominance into a measurement empire spanning chips, medicine, and science.
A student venture that became a global standard
Horiba traces its origins to 1945, when Masao Horiba started a measurement lab as a university student, formally founding the company in 1953 — one of Japan’s first student startups. Its famous corporate motto, “Joy and Fun” (おもしろおかしく), still defines a culture unusual in Japanese industry. Decades later, Horiba’s instruments are the invisible referees of the modern economy.
An 80% grip on emissions measurement
Horiba’s flagship dominance is in automotive emissions measurement systems, where it holds roughly 80% of the world market in analytical systems. When carmakers develop engines, and when regulators verify them, they overwhelmingly use Horiba equipment. Its portable PEMS units — the OBS series — became the de facto standard for the real-driving-emissions (RDE) tests adopted after the diesel scandal reshaped global regulation.

Five businesses, two near-monopolies
What makes Horiba remarkable is that emissions is only one of its strengths. The roughly $2.4 billion company runs five segments — Automotive, Semiconductor, Medical, Scientific, and Process & Environmental — and is a hidden leader in a second critical field:
- Semiconductors: Horiba is a major global supplier of mass flow controllers (MFCs), the devices that precisely regulate the gases flowing into chip-fabrication equipment. As the world builds new fabs for AI chips, this business rides the same wave as the equipment giants.
- Medical: blood and hematology analyzers used in clinics and hospitals worldwide.
- Scientific & Process: spectroscopy, particle analysis, and environmental monitoring instruments.
From the tailpipe to the battery
Horiba’s obvious risk is also its opportunity: as cars electrify, tailpipe emissions testing shrinks. Horiba is pivoting hard into EV and battery test systems — measuring battery performance, e-axles, and powertrains — applying its metrology expertise to the next generation of mobility. Its dual exposure to both the automotive transition and the semiconductor boom is rare for a single instruments company.
Why it matters for global partners and investors
- Investors get two structural growth stories in one — the global EV/automotive R&D cycle and the semiconductor capex boom — through a profitable, founder-cultured niche leader.
- Carmakers, chipmakers, and labs the world over already depend on Horiba; for suppliers and partners, it is a central node in the measurement supply chain.
- The watch item is how fast the EV-test and semiconductor businesses grow to offset any decline in conventional emissions testing.
Frequently asked questions
What is Horiba best known for?
Horiba holds about 80% of the global market for automotive emissions measurement systems — the analyzers carmakers and regulators use to measure exhaust — making it the world standard in that field.
What else does Horiba do besides emissions?
It runs five business segments. Beyond automotive, it is a major supplier of mass flow controllers for semiconductor manufacturing, plus blood analyzers for medicine and a range of scientific and environmental instruments.
How is Horiba responding to electric vehicles?
By expanding into EV and battery test systems — measuring batteries, e-axles, and powertrains — so its metrology expertise carries over from combustion engines to electrified mobility.
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