Thursday, July 9, 2009

HP sees first annual loss in 14 years



  First post by: www.itsbattery.com

HP Corp said it lost 98.9 billion yen ($1 billion) in the Presario V2000 fiscal year through March, its first annual net loss in 14 years, and projected it would lose even more money this year amid a slump in consumer demand for electronics goods.


Sony, which makes Bravia flat-panel TVs and Cyber-shot digital cameras, also said yesterday it is closing three plants in Japan this year to help turn its business around. That brings the total number of factories it is closing globally to eight by the end of March 2010. It is also in the midst of cutting 16,000 workers from its payrolls.


Hit by dropping sales and the strong yen, Sony lost 165 billion yen in the January-March quarter, compared to hp v2000 battery a 29 billion yen profit the previous year.


Sony joins a string of other big Japanese companies, including Toyota and Hitachi, that have announced huge losses and bleak outlooks.

Analysts say Sony's 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 pavillion zx5000 of rivals such as South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co and Taiwan's Acer Inc, which are better at producing cheaper products.


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

But the electronics and entertainment company said no quick recovery was in sight, projecting a 120 billion yen ($1.2 billion) loss for the fiscal year through March 2010.
Sony sees first annual loss in 14 years


Sony continued to lose money in its game segment, Hp zx5000 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. 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.


The results for the fiscal year through March were a reversal from the 369.4 billion yen profit Hp PP2200 recorded a year earlier. Annual sales slid 12.9 percent to 7.73 trillion yen, it said.


Sales for the fiscal year were down 20 percent in the US, 17 percent in Europe and 14 percent in Japan.

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.

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


Sony stock dropped 6.8 percent to 2,400 yen in Tokyo. Earnings were announced after Pavilion dv2000 trading ended.

No comments:

Post a Comment