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TRADE WARS
Japan's Sony more than doubles net loss forecast
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Feb 2, 2012


Japanese tech giant Sony more than doubled its full-year net loss forecast to $2.9 billion on Thursday, as outgoing president and CEO Howard Stringer admitted making errors but sought to defend his legacy.

The firm said it was expecting a net loss of 220 billion yen ($2.9 billion) for the year to March, up from 90 billion yen previously, in what will be its fourth consecutive year in the red.

Sony blamed difficult trading conditions in developed-country markets, the impact of severe flooding in Thailand, and the high yen among the causes of the revision.

Stringer's tenure has seen Sony assailed on multiple fronts, with mobile phones challenging its key games division -- which suffered an embarrassing hacking scandal -- huge losses in the firm's television business, and piracy threatening its music and film assets.

Last year, the Tokyo-based maker of PlayStation consoles and Bravia televisions lost 259.6 billion yen.

Sony announced Wednesday that Stringer would be stepping aside as president and CEO, to be replaced by his protege Kazuo Hirai, who at 51 becomes one of the youngest CEOs of a Nikkei 225 company.

Stringer, a Welsh-born American who became the firm's first foreign head when he took over in 2005, said that Sony's travails were the result of external events, among them Japan's earthquake and tsunami in March last year.

"There is no question 2011 was one of the most trying periods in Sony history. Certainly mine," he told reporters in Tokyo.

"There can be no denying that, were it not for all these natural and unnatural events, we would be sitting here revealing black ink, not red.

"The worst is nearly over. Keep in mind just how much this...has been results of disasters inflicted on us, not by us.

But he added: "It is not to say that we did not make mistakes. We have. Hopefully we have learned from all of them."

Sitting alongside Stringer, Hirai -- reportedly a former translator for bands including Beastie Boys and Journey -- said the Japanese electronics industry was "in crisis".

"I have a sense of urgency as the environment in which we operate is extremely tough," he said, adding nothing would be ruled out in his efforts to reform the company, including withdrawing from some businesses.

"This may come with painful decisions and choices," he said. "Our competitors and the business environment do not wait for us."

Sony has been linked to a tie-up with scandal-hit camera and medical equipment maker Olympus, and Hirai said the latter sector would be key to turning around his company but he would "refrain from commenting further".

Stringer closed his address to the press conference saying: "As I look back on the past seven years, despite frustrations and setbacks along the way, I am proud of the reforms we have made and victories we achieved."

But Seiichi Suzuki, analyst at Tokai Tokyo Securities, said Sony's key television business was "not good".

"I assume Sony's earnings were so bad that Stringer was forced to step aside," he said.

Many Japanese manufacturers invested "much more than necessary" in the sector to meet an anticipated spike in demand as the country switched over to digital transmission from analogue, he added, and were now reporting losses.

In its financial announcement, Sony posted a net loss of 201.45 billion yen for the nine months to December, down from a corresponding period profit of 129.22 billion yen.

Its third-quarter net loss of 159.00 billion yen reversed a net profit of 72.3 billion yen in the previous year.

Sony also booked a 108.8 billion accounting loss from its subsidiaries, which it said was primarily due to losses on its shares in S-LCD, a joint liquid crystal display venture with South Korean firm Samsung, and tax asset writedowns at Sony Ericsson.

Sony extricated itself from the LCD joint venture in December.

It forecast a full-year operating loss of 95 billion yen, having earlier projected a profit of 20 billion yen, on expected sales of 6.4 trillion yen, down from 6.5 trillion yen.

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Japan's Hitachi logs 61% dive in nine-month profit
Tokyo (AFP) Feb 2, 2012 - Japanese high-tech firm Hitachi on Tuesday said its nine-month net profit dived more than 61 percent year-on-year, with its third quarter hit by a strong yen and weaker demand from Europe and China.

Hitachi's net profit came to 85.23 billion yen ($1.1 billion) in the April-December period, as operating profit fell 21.4 percent from the previous fiscal year to 265.73 billion yen.

Sales edged up 1.1 percent to 6.84 trillion yen.

Earnings for the October-December quarter tumbled by nearly 45 percent as the European debt crisis, weaker Chinese demand and the strong yen hurt Hitachi's electronics and infrastructure businesses.

The company's products range from microchips to railways.

Revenues grew in systems for the automobile and telecom industries.

But that was offset by lower sales in the digital media/consumer products segment because of falling demand as well as lower income mainly in the power systems segment due to the impact of the March quake-tsunami disaster, it said.

A detailed table showed Hitachi slipped into the red in its power systems business, incurring operating losses of 11.2 billion yen in the nine months to December and 11.8 billion yen in the third quarter alone.

"This primarily reflected lower revenues, and delays and additional costs associated with overseas thermal power generation systems," the company said in a statement.

Demand for nuclear power generation dropped after the tsunami knocked out cooling systems at the Fukushima nuclear power plant, sparking the world's worst atomic accident in a quarter of a century.

Most of Japan's 54 nuclear reactors are offline with reactors that had been halted for regular check-ups not resuming operations amid widespread anti-nuclear sentiment.

Nine-month profit from digital media and consumer electronics fell due to decreased demand and lower prices for flat-screen televisions as well as the impact of flooding in Thailand, Hitachi said.

The firm left its earnings forecasts for the full year to March unchanged, expecting net profit to fall 16.3 percent to 200 billion yen and operating profit to shrink 10.0 percent to 400 billion yen.

Sales are expected to rise 2.0 percent to 9.5 trillion yen.



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Beijing (AFP) Feb 1, 2012
China is bracing for renewed calls to ease its rare earths controls after the World Trade Organization ruled Beijing's limits on key raw material exports broke trade rules, the China Daily said Wednesday. The WTO on Monday upheld its original decision and said China must bring duty and export quota measures on elements including magnesium and zinc into line with its WTO obligations. Beij ... read more


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