Friday July 31, 2009
Sony aims to break even
Struggling flat TV business showing improvement
TOKYO: Sony Corp posted a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss, helped by an improvement in its struggling flat TV business, and said it was aiming to beat its official forecast and at least break even for the full year.
Sony has fallen behind Apple Inc’s iPod in portable music, Nintendo Co in videogames, and is struggling to compete with Samsung Electronics Co Ltd in LCD TVs.
But the company, which vies with Panasonic Corp for the position of the world’s largest consumer electronics maker, said that losses on flat TVs had narrowed in the latest quarter, bringing the business close to the break even level.
The maker of Bravia flat TVs and Vaio PCs kept its operating loss forecast of 110 billion yen (US$1.2bil) for the year to March 31, 2010.
That is about half the 227.8 billion yen loss it racked up a year ago, and compares with the consensus of 117.7 billion yen loss according to a Reuters poll of 19 analysts. But Sony said it was aiming to beat that.
“We are keeping our official forecast but internally we are aiming to at least break even,” Sony chief financial officer Nobuyuki Oneda told a news conference.
With three quarters of its revenues earned overseas, Sony is vulnerable to the yen’s appreciation, which makes Japanese exports less price competitive overseas at a time South Korean rivals are benefiting from a softer won.
Sony reported a net loss of 37.1 billion yen for the April-June quarter, a reversal from a 34.98 billion yen profit a year ago.
In contrast, South Korea’s LG Electronics Inc posted a record quarterly profit on strong TV and mobile phone sales, while Samsung beat market expectations with a 5% rise in quarterly net profit.
Sony has been restructuring its sprawling operations. It has announced plans to close eight manufacturing sites, cut 16,000 jobs and halve its 2,500 suppliers.
“Sony is making changes to adapt to the environment but it still seems to be having trouble keeping up and perhaps should have been a bit more aggressive about cost-cutting,” said Mitsushige Akino, chief fund manager at Ichiyoshi Investment Management. — Reuters
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