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Panasonic forecasts $5.3 bln full-year loss
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 31, 2011

Parent of Taiwan's Foxconn reports profit drop
Taipei (AFP) Oct 31, 2011 - The parent of Taiwan technology giant Foxconn, which makes iPads and iPhones for Apple, said Monday its third-quarter profit dropped, with analysts pointing to the cost of moving factories in China.

Hon Hai Precision said it earned Tw$19.18 billion ($640 million) between July and September, about nine percent lower than in 2010.

"The costs from shifting production facilities from coastal areas in China to the inner part of the mainland peaked in the second quarter and since then have gradually fallen," said Edison Lee of Grand Cathay Securities in Taipei.

"Profits will gradually return to (their) normal track after the third quarter."

Despite the year-on-year drop, Hon Hai's third-quarter profit marked a 47.7 percent increase over the second quarter.

In the nine months to September, net profits came in at Tw$46.56 billion, down 16.4 percent from Tw$55.7 billion a year ago, Hon Hai said.

The company's Foxconn unit started moving some of its production to central China last year in a bid to cut costs and scale back its massive industrial campus in the southern boomtown of Shenzhen, which has been plagued by a series of employee suicides in recent years.

Foxconn is the world's largest maker of computer components and produces goods for tech giants including Apple, Sony and Nokia. It currently employs around one million workers in China, about half of them based in Shenzhen.


Japanese electronics giant Panasonic said Monday it expected to lose $5.3 billion this year as a strong yen and one-off charges reversed a previously forecast profit.

The company also said it would be shuttering plants and shifting its procurement and logistics base to Singapore, marking the first time any part of company's headquarters are to be outside Japan.

A liquid crystal display factory east of Tokyo and one in Shanghai will close, while production at another site in Japan will be reduced, it said.

The screens, which are used in televisions, will be sourced from a supplier, Chief Executive Fumio Ohtsubo told reporters.

Panasonic has struggled to cope with falling television prices and increased competition.

It has also been badly hit by the rocketing value of the yen, which has reached successive new post-war highs over recent months as investors seeking a save haven from the global economic storm have flocked to the currency.

On Monday, Japan intervened in currency markets for the first time since August to weaken the yen, sending the dollar as high as 79.49 after hitting 75.32 yen in Asian trade earlier in the day.

The move also saw the euro rise sharply to 111.25 yen from 107.06 yen earlier Monday.

A high yen punishes Japanese exporters such as Panasonic by making their goods more expensive overseas and eroding repatriated profits.

The company said Monday it had lost 136.15 billion yen ($1.75 billion)

between April and September.

It also forecast a group net loss of 420 billion yen for the full year to March 2012, compared to an earlier profit forecast of 30 billion yen, due to re-organisation and restructuring costs.

The first-half loss stemmed from declining sales, restructuring costs and the impact of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, the company said.

The weaker outlook came "due primarily to the sluggish overseas sales affected by ever-intensified price competition for digital products and the appreciation of the yen," the company said in a statement.

The loss came against a net profit of 74.72 billion yen logged in the same period a year earlier.

Osaka-based Panasonic booked an operating profit of 47.60 billion yen, down 71.8 percent from the first half of fiscal 2010, and sales of 4.01 trillion yen, down 8.3 percent.

The company also revised down its full-year operating profit to 130 billion yen from 270 billion yen, while it now expects sales of 8.3 trillion yen compared to 8.7 trillion yen.

Panasonic also unveiled plans to transfer the headquarters of its procurement and logistics operations from Osaka to Singapore in a process starting in April 2012.

"The move is part of the companys globalisation efforts in line with its midterm management plan," it said

"The operational shift to Singapore allows Panasonic to globally optimise the use of parts and materials procured outside Japan, as well as to build a logistics system with Asia in the centre of the operation.

"The company will work to develop new suppliers to cope with rising material prices as well as to cut procurement costs."

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Japan's Toshiba net profit down 18.5% in first half
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 31, 2011 - Japanese technology giant Toshiba on Monday said its net profit dropped 18.5 percent in the six months to September, mainly due to a strong yen and the impact of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

Toshiba's group net profit came to 22.7 billion yen ($287 million) for the first half, down from 27.8 billion yen for the same period last year.

The company, whose operations range from consumer electronics to nuclear power plants, said operating profit declined 23.4 percent to 80.2 billion yen with sales down 5.5 percent at 2.9 trillion yen.

The revenue and profit declines were mainly due to a slump in its digital products and electronics devices businesses, which were hit by "the impact of sharp yen appreciation and the March earthquake," a company statement said.

By sector, revenue from its digital products segment fell eight percent to 863 billion yen as sales of electronic devices slumped 11 percent to 813 billion yen.

Revenue from social infrastructure businesses edged down one percent to 1.01 trillion yen, but sales of home appliances rose four percent to 307 billion yen.

Toshiba has left its projection for the full year to March 2012 unchanged, still forecasting 140 billion yen in net profit and 300 billion yen in operating profit on sales of 7.0 trillion yen.

For the three months to September, net profit was 22.2 billion yen, down 18.7 percent from a year earlier, on sales of 1.59 trillion yen, down 2.7 percent.

Toshiba also attributed the quarterly profit slump to a strong yen.

On Monday, Japan intervened in currency markets for the first time since August to weaken the yen, after the unit's latest post-war dollar high underlined its threat to the nation's export-led economy.

The dollar rocketed to as high as 79.49 after hitting 75.32 yen in Oceanian trade earlier Monday. The intervention also saw the euro rise sharply to 111.25 yen from 107.06 yen earlier Monday.

China sales push Taiwan's HTC to record profit
Taipei (AFP) Oct 31, 2011 - Taiwanese smartphone maker HTC said Monday that strong demand from China helped it post a record profit in the three months to September, but it forecasted slower phone sales in the fourth quarter.

The firm's net profit of Tw$18.68 billion ($624.6 million) was 68 percent higher than in the same quarter a year ago, while revenues surged 79 percent to Tw$135.82 billion, according to a company statement.

During the quarter, HTC shipped a record 13.2 million handsets worldwide, up 93 percent year-on-year. However the company said it would ship fewer phones in the fourth quarter due to the global economic slowdown.

Although North America and Europe remain HTC's biggest markets, the company said China would play a growing role in its growth.

"China is one of the most important growth regions for HTC, and China reported top sales growth across all regions this quarter -- nine fold more than its sales volume in the same period last year," the company said, declining to specify the number of mobile phones it sold in China.

HTC sells its own smartphones and also makes handsets for a number of leading US companies, including the Nexus One unveiled by Google.



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TRADE WARS
Panasonic posts $1.7 billion net loss in April-September
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 31, 2011
Japan's Panasonic said Monday it posted a net loss of 136.15 billion yen ($1.7 billion) between April and September as sales fell and predicted a full-year net loss, reversing an earlier profit forecast. The consumer electronics and home appliance giant expects a group net loss of 420 billion yen for the year to March 2012, compared to a profit of 30 billion yen projected earlier due to re-o ... read more


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