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Sony Loss 2011: Company Projects Record $6.4 Billion Hit

First Posted: 04/10/2012 5:58 am Updated: 04/10/2012 1:02 pm


* Sees record 520 bln yen net loss in year to end-March 2012

* Loss inflated by 300 bln yen write-off of tax credits

* Sony down 9.7 pct in Germany

* No current plans to raise capital - CFO

* Sharp ups full-yr loss forecast to 380 bln yen from 290 bln

By Tim Kelly

TOKYO, April 10 (Reuters) - Japan's Sony Corp flagged a record $6.4 billion annual net loss, double an earlier forecast and a fourth straight year of red ink, as it writes off deferred tax credits, heaping more pressure on its new CEO to turn around the electronics giant.

Sony, which plans to axe 10,000 jobs - around 6 percent of its global workforce - according to media reports this week, has been hammered by weak demand for its televisions and overtaken by more innovative gadget rivals such as Apple Inc and Samsung Electronics.

Yet, in a bid to ease investor concerns over its deteriorating bottom line, Sony forecast it would bounce back in the current year to end-March 2013 with an operating profit of 180 billion yen ($2.2 billion).

In a sign that Sony's woes are industry-wide among Japan's consumer electronics firms, LCD TV maker Sharp Corp on Tuesday also raised its full-year net loss forecast - to 380 billion yen ($4.67 billion) from 290 billion yen.

Kazuo Hirai, who took over as Sony's CEO this month, has said he is prepared to take "painful steps" to revive the company, insisting he would not hesitate to scale back or withdraw from businesses he deemed uncompetitive. He will lay out his revival strategy in more detail at a briefing scheduled for Thursday.

The Sony veteran, known for reviving the PlayStation gaming operations through aggressive cost-cutting, has promised to get the struggling TV business - which has lost $10 billion alone in 10 years - back on its feet within two years.

"There have been several reasons for our poor results," Chief Financial Officer Masaru Kato said at a news briefing in Tokyo on Tuesday, noting a strong yen and poor demand.

Asked whether the ballooning losses would cause heads to roll among Sony executives, Kato said: "We are aiming for a rebound and for this we have made management changes."

Sony securities traded in Germany slumped almost 10 on Tuesday. In Tokyo, Sony shares closed down 3.5 percent ahead of the announcement, the biggest one-day drop in three weeks in a flat market.

Sony stock has almost halved in little more than a year, and has dropped 11 percent in the past 10 trading sessions.



In a fourth revision to its annual estimates, Sony forecast a 520 billion yen ($6.4 billion) net loss for the year to end-March 2012. In February it had forecast an annual net loss of 220 billion yen. The annual results are due on May 21.

The additional loss is from writing off 300 billion yen of deferred tax assets primarily in the United States - credits built up to use against future taxable profits, but which have been written off due to the company's consistent losses.

The company maintained its February forecast for a 95 billion yen annual operating loss.

"To bring Sony back, Hirai needs to develop personnel and platforms that create competitive and innovative products, but a lot of talent left under early retirement plans," said Tetsuru Ii, president of Commons Asset Management, who oversees about 2.7 billion yen worth of assets and does not hold Sony stock.

"The old Sony culture would only allow it to make things that were the best globally. Under that logic, does it make sense to continue its TV business, when it's not even the market leader in Japan?"

Kato, who would not confirm the reports of job losses other than to note there would be cuts in a chemical business and small LCD unit that are being hived off, said Sony had no plans to raise money through a share offering or other equity finance.

"We can improve shareholder equity in several ways, including bolstering cash flow or selling assets," he told reporters. "Equity finance is also an option, but at this moment we have no concrete plan to do so."

Assuming Sony's assets are still valued at 12.9 trillion yen, the revised loss will push shareholder equity to 1.9 trillion yen, or a ratio of 15 percent, down from 17.2 percent at the end of 2011.


REKINDLING THE FLAME?

Some analysts believe Hirai, a fluent English speaker, can rekindle the Sony flame, saying he will know how to break down its silos and integrate its divisions.

"They could certainly become profitable through downsizing and shrinking some of their loss-making businesses this year, but we'll have to wait and see if they can continuously be profitable," said Yuuki Sakurai, head of fund manager Fukoku Capital, who oversees about 1.5 trillion yen worth of assets. Fukoku has a small holding in Sony, according to Reuters data.

"I think Sony is fighting with its old image. People think Sony can succeed (by doing what it did in the past), when there is a limit to what they can really do (in the current competitive landscape)."

A key concept in Hirai's strategy hinges on merging Sony's robust roster of entertainment properties - including singers Kelly Clarkson and Michael Jackson, and the "Spider-Man" and "Men in Black" film franchises - with its Vaio, Bravia and other electronics brands, in an effort to boost sales.

The new chief plans to widen the content network connecting its PlayStation games consoles to other Sony devices. He has also said the TV business would be crucial to this "convergence" strategy, brushing aside any suggestions of exiting the market.

Recently, Sony pulled out of an LCD panel venture with Samsung, enabling it to obtain screens for its TVs more cheaply. It also agreed to buy out Ericsson's half of their smartphone venture for $1.5 billion to shore up its position in a market where Apple and Samsung have become leaders. Sony has since launched its first smartphones, the Xperia series, under the Sony brand.

Hirai, promoted from head of Sony's consumer products and services businesses that produce the bulk of the group's $85 billion in annual sales, has also singled out medical as a potential core business for the future.

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* Sees record 520 bln yen net loss in year to end-March 2012 * Loss inflated by 300 bln yen write-off of tax credits * Sony down 9.7 pct in Germany * No cu...
* Sees record 520 bln yen net loss in year to end-March 2012 * Loss inflated by 300 bln yen write-off of tax credits * Sony down 9.7 pct in Germany * No cu...
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05:28 PM on 04/11/2012
I can see this. Their quality is bad. I've had 3 Vaio laptops over the past 5 years. They each crap out when they hit the year and half mark (it's always the ac jack that breaks. What use is a computer you can't charge?!?!). Granted they're the only company I know that sends a tech to your house when your computer breaks and is under warranty but it's not enough to get me to spend another $1k on a laptop. They're end being just fancy paperweights.

Over priced and cheaply made sums up Sony now.
08:13 AM on 04/11/2012
Even the mighty fall... This is the company that signed up 10,000 of artists & put them on the shelf just to get them out of the marketplace and so no one else could sign them.. I know bcuz it happened to a good friend... "You know that song... No tears here...
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deucejuice
07:56 AM on 04/11/2012
No surprise. The ps3 is useless.
12:49 AM on 04/11/2012
They should have invested in an online presence for the PS3. Sure it's a great system and everyone always cheered that the online service was free but look how far it has fallen behind Xbox Live.

I've never liked Sony because of all the proprietary cables, storage media, and failed devices. Sony has always been the odd man out in that area. No one uses their dumb cables, their MiniDiscs, their MMC media cards. Give me a break. If they just practice a little more openness in their design and implementation of technology they could have stayed in the race.
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Lonnie DeVorak
09:29 PM on 04/10/2012
Sony has been falling behind for years now. They always have to do things different than everyone else, now is biting them in the butt.
07:01 PM on 04/10/2012
The steady decline of Sony is symptomatic of the gradual decline of Japan itself.

And the decline of Japan is tied in with the relative decline of the G-7 which includes western Europe and north America. How can they compete with an industrialized and highly motivated China that has a much cheaper labor force?

The 21st century will very likely be the Chinese century. Once Chinese brand names take over, even Apple and Samsung will go the way of Sony...
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abuckley23
Published author. Visit me at Planet Kibi!
04:32 PM on 04/10/2012
Ouch. Must hurt to get kicked in the yen that hard.
04:19 PM on 04/10/2012
Sony must be thrilled with their recent flop, John Carter.
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Jack Boats
not a proof reader
03:36 PM on 04/10/2012
Apparently SONY was napping through this little thing called the internet.

This is a great example of what happens to a once innovative company that filled it's decision making positions with a bunch of suit wearing yes men who can only spend money and point the finger at others when their dopey ideas fail.

Too big to fail, I think NOT! screw them, that corporate monolith wouldn't recognize a good idea if it stole their market share.
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Col Hogan
What is this man doing here?
05:30 PM on 04/10/2012
That is one accurate description of Sony Pictures Entertainment, IMHO.
11:23 PM on 04/10/2012
Every company that tries to tangle with Nintendo is doomed
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Jack Boats
not a proof reader
11:55 PM on 04/10/2012
They do understand how disposable their products are and price them appropriately.
12:12 PM on 04/11/2012
I'll agree with that statement to a point, when it comes to handhelds let Nintendo have the battlefield, but when it comes to home consoles Playstation can hold it's own. Their biggest mistake was the 700 to 800 price for the PS3 when it launched. I'm sure execs at Microsoft and Nintendo smiled when they knew Sony was shooting themselves in the foot.
03:27 PM on 04/10/2012
Sony's product are pretty well made. One thing they could do to help increase sales, is open a plant in US, and lower prices. Sony prices have always bee artificially high.....
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Jack Boats
not a proof reader
03:38 PM on 04/10/2012
I think they do have a plant here. But it's true their products aren't any better than the competitions these days. The trinitron was their last great innovation.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
J0E1
Don't blame me, I'm not a republicrat.
04:17 PM on 04/10/2012
Their Bravia line of LCD TV's were miles ahead of the rest IMO, always had the best picture and most accurate color representation of the bunch... unfortunately for them, the rest is already catching up.  I still think their line of Bravia TV's are better than their competition but not 50-100% better which is the premium you pay for them.
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Adam William Majkowski
Resistance is NOT futile
02:38 PM on 04/10/2012
They invested heavily in the playstation 3, losing money in the process, right before our economy crashed to pieces. It is a classic example of a capitalist company gambling on the future in an effort to "get ahead" and losing big. The problem is that the people who really lose are the ones who lose jobs at the bottom.
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Jack Boats
not a proof reader
03:43 PM on 04/10/2012
The biiger fail was them not recognizing the console gaming platform as a dying medium and sprinting like an agile cat to a viable online distribution scheme. I worked at a Sony studio at the launch of the PS3 they laid many off within a year of launch. We were already trying to make games for electronic distribution but the powers that be kept stopping us. Dumb corporate leadership is the blame!
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Fred Williams
02:23 PM on 04/10/2012
Too bad. I have always thought that Sony products were first rate in design and quality. Sony has lost it's ability to innovate for the past decade, and hasn't been attuned with the demands of the market. Samsung has become the third largest electronics producer for the world by investing heavily in process and product technology. Their strategy is to make speedy changes in products to gain advantage over competitors, something Sony has lost.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
J0E1
Don't blame me, I'm not a republicrat.
04:19 PM on 04/10/2012
Samsung is actually the largest information technology company be revenue in the world.
02:08 PM on 04/10/2012
SONY still makes the best video game consoles in the industry.
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Jack Boats
not a proof reader
03:45 PM on 04/10/2012
That most US gamers don't care about. The console was dead at the end of the PS2 life cycle. Sony failed to recognize that.
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Feurio
Religion poisons everything
10:52 PM on 04/10/2012
Not really. PS1 had horrific graphics, PS2 was underwhelming and PS3 is difficult to code for and suffers from performance problems due to the RAM design.
12:22 PM on 04/11/2012
If you're comparing the PS1 to games of today of course the PS1 games are going to look terrible, but for that time it was the futrue of gaming. As for the PS2 it conquer the market making the Nintendo GameCube and Microsoft's XBOX the "other" systems. The PS3's biggest problems were it's launch price and lack of third-party support in the beginning. Every system has some problems developers find that makes it hard for them to program for, but eventually they overcome that.
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JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
02:04 PM on 04/10/2012
Back in the eighties, SONY was a garantee of quality. You just couldn't go wrong buying SONY.
But the last ten years or so, the quality took a dive. They're brand name now equals junk. Good luck saving youself.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
J0E1
Don't blame me, I'm not a republicrat.
02:11 PM on 04/10/2012
Unfortunately so has everyone elses.   The quality of ALL modern electronics is junk.
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Fred Williams
02:35 PM on 04/10/2012
True. Everything is made in China, where quality control seems to be non-existent. The Chinese manufacturing philosophy is that it is cheaper to accept a high failure rate on production, and just make more of the items. Unfortunately we have to endure products that have short life spans and in some cases dangerous consequences (Example: power outlet strips that catch on fire).
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Adam William Majkowski
Resistance is NOT futile
02:42 PM on 04/10/2012
At first capitalism seems to stimulate quality with everyone trying to make a better product than the last person in an effort to take market share. Alas, we have seen the end result over and over in every civilization since we have recorded history. Eventually one person or company takes over a market, and then begins to reduce the quality and fix the prices and we all suffer. Until we gather up some respect for ourselves and other people, we will not even think about doing something to stop these criminal companies.
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baxtron
tek phlarpt
01:51 PM on 04/10/2012
Samsung has surpassed SONY in the innovative and affordable TV market. Samsung is cheaper, so my choice is easier.