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May 14, 2009 8:35 AM

Sony Takes $1B Hit; First Loss In 14 Years

By
CBSNews
(AP)  Sony Corp. reported its first annual net loss in 14 years and forecast a bigger loss this year, saying the pressure from sliding sales, competition in gadget prices and a strong yen was expected to continue.

The Japanese electronics and entertainment company said Thursday it lost 165 billion yen ($1.72 billion) in the January-March quarter, compared to a 29 billion yen profit for the same period the previous year. That brought its full fiscal year loss to a 98.9 billion yen ($1 billion).

Sony, which makes Bravia flat-panel TVs and Cyber-shot digital cameras, said it is closing three plants in Japan to help turn its business around. It is also in the midst of cutting 16,000 workers.

Sony said no quick recovery was in sight, projecting a 120 billion yen ($1.2 billion) loss for the fiscal year through March 2010.

It joins a string of other big Japanese corporations, including Toyota Motor Corp. and Hitachi Ltd., that have announced huge losses and bleak outlooks.

Also Thursday, Sanyo Electric Co. said it booked a net loss of 93.2 billion yen ($976 million) for the fiscal year, compared with a 28.7 billion yen profit the year before. It expects to turn a small profit of 7 billion yen this year.

Sanyo is being acquired by Panasonic Corp., which is also expected to announce dismal earnings Friday.

Analysts say Chief Executive Howard Stringer, who decided to center power in his position earlier this year by also becoming president, has yet to give details of a turnaround plan, including strategies and products.

Stringer, a Welsh-born American and the first foreigner to head Sony, has promoted four relatively young Japanese executives onto his managerial team. Representing the company's gaming and electronics sectors, they aim to take advantage of Sony's sprawling empire to differentiate it from a host of rivals such as South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co. and Taiwan's Acer Inc., which are better at producing cheaper products.

Sony's annual sales slid 12.9 percent to 7.73 trillion yen. Sales fell in all key markets: down 20 percent in the U.S., 17 percent in Europe and 14 percent in Japan.

Its fiscal year loss was a reversal from the 369.4 billion yen profit it had a year earlier.

Still, the loss was smaller than the company's forecast for a 150 billion yen shortfall. The result wasn't as bad partly because TV prices held up better than expected, Sony said. A one-time gain from a change in Japanese tax laws also helped, it said.

Sony continued to lose money in its game segment, where its PlayStation 3 home console and PlayStation Portable have struggled against rival offerings from Nintendo Co., the Wii and DS, as well as in some markets against the Xbox 360 from Microsoft Corp.

Koya Tabata, analyst with Credit Suisse in Tokyo, said the forecast was in line with what he had expected. Sony must in the short run fix its electronics inventory as one step in turning its business around, he said.

"In the longer term, we are all waiting for the PlayStation network business to deliver profits," he said. "But that depends on management."

Sony sold 10.06 million PlayStation 3 machines for the fiscal year through March, up 10 percent from the previous year. It also sold more PlayStation Portable machines, at 14.11 million during the fiscal year, up slightly from 13.81 million.

Sony is closing three plants in Japan by the end of December - one for cell-phone cameras, another for video recorder parts and another for systems used for smart cards. After they are shuttered, the number of plants around the world will dwindle from 57 last year to 49.

The company said it was on track with its previously announced plan to reduce 8,000 of its 185,000 jobs around the world, and trim another 8,000 temporary workers who aren't included in the global work force tally.

Sony said it was raising its cost reduction efforts from an earlier 250 billion yen by March 2010 to 300 billion yen.

It said it had an operating loss in its core electronics segment because of the slowing global economy, price competition and a strong yen, which erased any benefits from better liquid-crystal display TVs.

In its movies division, home entertainment sales declined. They were not offset by some of its stronger motion picture releases, including "Hancock."

In its music business, Beyonce's "I Am Sasha Fierce" and AC/DC's "Black Ice" were among albums that did well during the fiscal year just ended.

Sony stock dropped 6.8 percent to 2,400 yen in Tokyo. Earnings were announced after trading ended.

AP
Add a Comment
by whitemale08 May 14, 2009 10:55 AM EDT
It looks like Sony and all of these international conglomerates are watching what happens when you don't raise the wages of the serf.

In the end there's no one left to buy your products.

That's why all of these companies have to be broken up and competition put back in for local manufacturing and good salaries for employees.

This whole British-style of 'globalization' where multi-nationals rule the world through serfdom is evidently un-sustainable.

In true capitalism, a company has a life span like any other, so why try and force the enivitable from coming?
Reply to this comment
by adek1 May 14, 2009 10:22 AM EDT
I could care less about Sony. I worked for them in PA for a short time where they made their big screen TVs. They work their employees like DOGS, implementing mandatory overtime night after night. They would walk around and stand their watching people break their behinds until they were finished with the work. The next day you would come in so tired, you had no life because you were so tired when you were home.

And all of this for barely above minimum wage. So it doesn't bother me in the least that they are hurting. The cost of the billions they have profited from their "culture" of labor shouldn't be allowed. I won't buy a sony product.
Reply to this comment
by inachu1 May 14, 2009 8:35 AM EDT
eightsigma !
you are 100% correct!
Sony used to sell exotic walkmans in the 1980's and you do not see any super cool exotic electronic devices anymore. I was a big sony fan for over 15 years but as of late their product line looks dull,boring and just something that will not stop you at the store window. When those super mini cassette players came out I was the first in line to buy one.
Reply to this comment
by eightsigma May 14, 2009 8:31 AM EDT
You don't suppose it could have anything to do with quality? I used to be a big Sony customer and switched to other brands after some bad experiences.
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