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Sony forecasts first annual net loss in 14 years
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 22 - 01 - 2009


Sony projected it would report its first
annual net loss in 14 years Thursday, and Chief Executive
Howard Stringer vowed to turn around the company with pay
cuts, job reductions and trendier gadgets, reported ap.
«The massive economic upheaval being experienced across
the globe is sparing no one in the consumer electronics
world,» Stringer said at a hastily called news conference
at Sony's Tokyo headquarters after it announced the
earnings revision.
Battered by slumping sales and a strong yen, the Japanese
electronics and entertainment company expects to sink into
a 150 billion yen ($1.7 billion) net loss for the fiscal
year through March, a reversal from 369.4 billion yen
profit the previous year.
To cope with the slowdown, Sony Corp. said last month it
would cut 8,000 of its 185,000 jobs around the world and
shutter five or six plants _ about 10 percent of its 57
factories. It would also trim 8,000 temporary workers who
aren't included in the global work force tally.
Sony said Thursday it plans to cut another 1,000 temporary
workers in Japan and close one of two domestic TV plants.
Sony also will offer early retirement packages to its
regular, full-time workers in an effort to cut 30 percent
of its personnel costs in its TV business by March 2010. It
refused to give a head count but said they are part of the
8,000 job cuts announced earlier.
Stringer also said he and two other top executives,
including President Ryoji Chubachi, will give up their
entire bonus, reducing their annual pay by half. Other
executives and managers will see lower pay.
Stringer said such steps weren't enough. Sony needs to be
more aggressive in cutting costs by avoiding redundancies,
streamline the supplier chain and anticipate the trends in
Internet-linking gadgets like the interactive TV set, he
said.
«There is still a lot of the old Sony, and not enough of
the new Sony,» he said, acknowledging that the company
faces intense competition from growing rivals like Samsung
Electronics, Apple Inc. and Microsoft Corp.
Koya Tabata, electronics analyst at Credit Suisse in
Tokyo, said Stringer was saying nothing new.
«There was no change to his strategy. What he said was
more of the same,» he said. «And that's bad.»
Stringer said he was aware of the relatively protective
lifetime employment regulations in Japan for full-time
workers, adding that the company would «tread very, very
carefully.» Major Japanese companies have relied on a
temporary work force to adjust to production swings.
Sony, which makes the Walkman player and PlayStation 3
game machine, also lowered its sales forecast for the
fiscal year through March. It predicts fiscal year sales to
decline 13 percent to 7.7 trillion yen. In October, it had
expected 9 trillion yen in sales.
The efforts announced Thursday are expected to save Sony
250 billion yen for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2010,
but the restructuring measures will cost 170 billion yen,
according to Sony.
Other measures include outsourcing software development in
India, and signing deals for making cheaper products in
emerging markets, it said.
Like other Japanese exporters, Sony is taking a beating
from the global slump that crimped consumer spending during
the critical year-end shopping season. The yen's
appreciation and a plunge in gadget prices have also taken
a toll.
Sony is particularly vulnerable to the strong yen since
about 80 percent of its sales come from overseas. The
dollar has dropped to below 90 yen recently from as high as
117 yen last year, eroding with it Sony's foreign income.
The last _ and only _ time Sony reported a loss, for the
fiscal year ending March 1995, the red ink came from
one-time losses in its movie division, marred by box office
flops and lax cost controls.
Some of Japan Inc.'s biggest names are getting hammered by
the global slowdown. Toyota Motor Corp., which last year
dethroned General Motors Corp. as the world's largest
automaker, is forecasting its first operating loss in 70
years _ although it says it will eke out a small net
profit.
Trouble has been brewing at Sony for some time. In
October, it lowered its forecast to a 150 billion yen ($1.7
billion) profit, but it said conditions had worsened since
then.
Sony said the slowing global economy and price declines
were wiping out 250 billion yen in operating profit, while
the yen's appreciation took out another 40 billion yen.
Restructuring charges cost 30 billion yen. Declining equity
value of its affiliates was an extra 20 billion yen loss,
it said.
Profitability had worsened at its video game and movies
units, as well as with its financial businesses in Japan,
including an insurer and Internet bank, it said.
«We must move ahead with reforms, but my mission is to
also nurture innovation,» Chubachi said. «We will become
a strong Sony.»
The company's stock fell 51 yen, or 2.6 percent, to 1,938
yen. The earnings revision was announced after the market
closed.


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