Esato Mobile
Sony Ericsson / Sony : General : Sony Mobile financial results - Official
> New Topic
> Reply
< Esato Forum Index > Sony Ericsson / Sony > General > Sony Mobile financial results - Official Bookmark topic
Page123>

>500 Posts: > 500

So I thought we needed a dedicated thread for this. Rather than taking up space in the rumours thread. Where people seem to think the topics are related.....

New results are due out tomorrow.
[ This Message was edited by: >500 on 2014-05-14 04:17 ]

--
Posted: 2014-05-13 13:04:11
Edit : Quote

tonif430 Posts: 77

I will look for info here tomorrow


--
Posted: 2014-05-13 21:44:03
Edit : Quote

Tsepz_GP Posts: > 500

Report: Kaz Hirai, Sony execs may accept 50 percent pay cut, forgo bonuses

Ahead of Sony's upcoming full consolidated results for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2014, The Wall Street Journal reports that Sony CEO and President Kazuo Hirai and other executives will not accept bonuses for the year, receiving a diminished 50 percent cut in annual pay.

Sony adjusted its financial forecast for the business year earlier this month for the third time in the fiscal year. The company cited its exit from the PC market and the diminishing consumer interest in physical media such as DVDs and Blu-rays.

Sony announced in February that it will sell its PC business and exit the PC market. It expects 30 billion yen in expenses for the fiscal year related to the strategy. The company is also projecting a 25 billion yen in impairment charges for overseas disc manufacturing, that has slowed due to the rising popularity of digital media and downloadable content.

Sony will share its full consolidated results for the fiscal year on May 14, where it expects to report a net loss of 130 billion yen ($1.27 billion), an adjustment from February's projection of a 110 billion yen ($1.07 billion) loss. The forecast for operating income is now 26 billion yen, a decrease of the previously expected 80 billion yen.
Polygon

--
Posted: 2014-05-14 01:58:52
Edit : Quote

randomuser Posts: > 500

Xperia Shipments down to 8.8 million units for Q1 2014 from 10.7 million in Q4 2013

Mobile business posted loss of 67.5 billion yen in Q1 2014

FY2013 Mobile business loss stands at 75 billion yen.


FY2013 Mobile shipments 39.1 million
[ This Message was edited by: randomuser on 2014-05-14 07:30 ]

--
Posted: 2014-05-14 08:07:50
Edit : Quote

Gitaroo Posts: > 500

how are they even loosing money in mobile?
--
Posted: 2014-05-14 08:20:06
Edit : Quote

randomuser Posts: > 500

No idea lol.

Btw Sony is out of the Top 10 smartphone vendors list for Q1 2014, No.9 and No.10 ZTE and Youlong shipped 10 and 9 million respectively.


--
Posted: 2014-05-14 08:43:18
Edit : Quote

tonif430 Posts: 77

So, there is an increase in sales



But htey continue to loss money, I don't get it....

FY2014 forecast is to sell 50.000.000 Xperia's !!!!
--
Posted: 2014-05-14 09:02:16
Edit : Quote

Tsepz_GP Posts: > 500

Oh dear...

How much longer can they keep going like this, it's like SE back in 2009, except the numbers are much bigger. The vultures are going to start circling over them if not already.
--
Posted: 2014-05-14 10:05:40
Edit : Quote

motvikt Posts: > 500

Aren't the loss because of the Vaio "sell"?
--
Posted: 2014-05-14 10:25:23
Edit : Quote

Tsepz_GP Posts: > 500

Sony posts US$1.26b fiscal year net loss



Struggling electronics giant Sony lost $1.26 billion in the fiscal year to March, the once-mighty firm said Wednesday, blaming costs tied to its exit from the personal computer business as it undergoes a painful restructuring.

TOKYO: Struggling electronics giant Sony lost $1.26 billion in the fiscal year to March, the once-mighty firm said Wednesday, blaming costs tied to its exit from the personal computer business as it undergoes a painful restructuring.

The Japanese firm booked a whopping shortfall of 128.37 billion yen ($1.26 billion), and forecast a 50 billion yen net loss in the current fiscal year to March 2015, as it saw losses narrow in its hard-hit television business.

Revenue increased 14.3 per cent to 7.76 trillion yen owing to a weak yen, record sales for its new PlayStation 4 videogames console and strong demand for its smartphones.

The company's woeful bottom line results come a day after it said it would not pay bonuses to senior executives for the third straight year.

Moody's has downgraded its credit rating on Sony to junk, saying the company must do more to repair its battered balance sheet.

Investors were shocked this month when Sony warned it would lose more than the 110 billion yen shortfall it had forecast just three months ago, when it said it would cut 5,000 jobs in its struggling computer and television units.

Sony President Kazuo Hirai has led a sweeping restructuring, including asset liquidisation that saw the $1.0 billion sale of Sony's Manhattan headquarters.

Last week, Sony said it would shutter its ebook Reader Store in Europe and Australia following a similar pullout in North America.

Reports have also said Sony would sell properties at a prestigious Tokyo site where it had its headquarters for six decades.

But Hirai has repeatedly shrugged off pleas to abandon the ailing television unit, which he insists remains central to Sony's core business.

Japanese manufacturers have suffered badly in their TV divisions as razor-thin margins and fierce overseas competition weigh on results.

Sony was once king of consumer electronics and a byword for cool.

But the company that revolutionised the way people listen to music with its Walkman portable cassette player has lost its footing since the sure-fire successes of the 1980s, and been overtaken by nimbler foreign competitors like Apple and Samsung.

The electronics that built the brand are now an albatross around its neck, weighing on the profits that other arms of the huge company generate, such as those in music publishing and a movie division that includes a Hollywood studio.

A little-known insurance business also makes money.

But the movie business also struggled over the past year, while the cost of the PS4 launch put its games division into an operating loss, Sony said.

"Sales for Motion Pictures decreased significantly year-on-year due to lower theatrical and home entertainment revenues as the previous fiscal year benefited from the strong performances of Skyfall, The Amazing Spider-Man and Men in Black 3," Sony said in a statement.

Earlier this year, Sony said it was selling its Vaio-brand PC division to a Japanese investment fund as it plans to concentrate on its line-up of smartphones and tablets.

After suffering four years of losses, Sony crept back into the black in the previous fiscal year -- although that was mostly due to asset sales and a weak yen which inflates repatriated profits.

Despite its high-profile struggles, Sony has seen buoyant sales of its Xperia smartphone offering and record demand for its new PlayStation 4 console.

Last month, the firm said it had sold seven million PS4 consoles worldwide since its launch in late 2013.

The PS4 is up against Microsoft's Xbox One, and Nintendo's Wii U for dominance of the digital home entertainment market at a time when consoles are under intense pressure to prove their worth in a world of ubiquitous smartphones and tablets for games and videos.

Sony's Tokyo-listed shares closed up 1.06 per cent to 1,805 yen, with the earnings announcement made after markets had closed.

Channel News Asia
--
Posted: 2014-05-14 10:56:22
Edit : Quote
Page123>

New Topic   Reply
Forum Index

Esato home