Wednesday May 14, 6:31 PM
Sony posts loss, sees growth in cameras, TVs
TOKYO (Reuters) - Sony Corp posted a surprise
quarterly loss on Wednesday after a weak stock market ate into
the value of securities held by its financial arm, but it
forecast a bigger-than-expected profit this year as it boosts
sales of digital cameras and flat TVs.
Sony, locked in a three-way battle with Microsoft Corp
and Nintendo Co Ltd in the game industry,
has been able to narrow losses on the PlayStation 3 game
console by cutting manufacturing costs and expanding sales.
The electronics and entertainment conglomerate has also
enjoyed strong sales of Cyber-shot digital cameras, VAIO PCs
and handheld video cameras, helping push its operating profit
up more than five-fold in the business year that ended on March
31.
"Considering that Sony was operating under adverse economic
conditions, including a strong yen, both the results and
outlook seem to show that Sony's stamina has grown stronger,"
said Kazuhara Miura, an analyst at Daiwa Institute of Research.
It suffered an operating loss of 4.7 billion yen ($45
million) in January-March, an improvement from a 113 billion
yen loss a year earlier but short of an average estimate of a
27.3 billion yen profit from five analysts surveyed by Reuters.
The fourth-quarter loss was due mainly to a slide in the
value of stocks and convertible bonds held by its financial
division.
Sony said it expects operating profit to grow 20 percent to
450 billion yen in the year to March 2009, beating the market
consensus of 428.5 billion yen. It sees revenues rising 1
percent to 9 trillion yen.
Japanese exporters including Sony are facing tough business
conditions this year due to a firmer yen, rising raw materials
prices and signs of a slowdown in the global economy.
Sony aims to sell 17 million liquid crystal display TVs in
the year to next March, up from 10.6 million in the year just
ended. That compares with Sharp Corp's target to sell
10 million LCD TVs and Matsushita's plans to sell 11
million flat TVs.
"The business environment is not so good but we will
generate sales growth from LCD TVs," Sony Chief Financial
Officer Nobuyuki Oneda told a news conference.
IMPROVING ITS GAME
In a bid to secure enough display panels for its Bravia LCD
TVs, Sony plans to take a one-third stake in Sharp's 380
billion yen LCD panel plant set for completion by March 2010.
It will also be building a new LCD panel production line
with Samsung Electronics Co Ltd , Sony's partner in
panel production but its archrival in retail outlets.
For the full year that ended on March 31, operating profit
surged to 374.5 billion yen from 71.8 billion yen, helped by
smaller losses and one-off gains from the sale of part of its
former headquarters site and chip-making facilities.
But the result still missed Sony's own forecast in January
of 410 billion yen.
Sony's financial services division, which includes its life
insurance and banking operations, posted an operating loss of
30 billion yen for the fourth quarter, a sharp downswing from
an operating profit of 29.5 billion yen a year earlier.
Sony said it planned to double its dividend in the current
year to 50 yen.
Shares in Sony closed up 1.3 percent at 4,850 yen ahead of
the announcement, but are still down 22 percent since the start
of 2008, underperforming a fall of 7 percent in the Tokyo stock
market's electrical machinery index.
Mitsushige Akino, chief fund manager at Ichiyoshi
Investment Managment, said the market may react positively to
Sony's outlook, especially since it is based on a currency rate
of 100 yen to the dollar and the dollar is now at 105 yen.
"The game business is likely to drastically improve and the
LCD TV business is also expected to be profitable. If Sony can
accomplish these two things, it can easily lift its earnings
forecasts, unless the yen starts trading around 90 yen," he
said.
($1=103.76 Yen)
(Additional reporting by Taiga Uranaka, Mayumi Negishi,
Nathan Layne and Aiko Hayashi; Editing by Michael Watson)
|