TOKYO (Reuters) - Less than a fortnight into his job as CEO, Kazuo Hirai on Thursday sketched out a revival strategy for Sony Corp built around mobile electronics - phones, games and cameras - and a medical business with annual sales of $1.2 billion.
Hirai, who took
over from Howard Stringer this month, has doubled Sony's annual loss
forecast to a record $6.4 billion, and is under intense pressure to fix
an ailing TV business and turn around a brand that has been trampled by
Apple Inc and South Korea's Samsung Electronics.
"We have heard a
multitude of investor voices calling for change," Hirai told a packed
news conference at Sony's Tokyo headquarters, close to the company's
first factory established 65 years ago. "Sony will change."
"Sony has always been an entrepreneurial company. That spirit has not changed," he said.
Sony, and other
leading Japanese TV makers Sharp Corp and Panasonic Corp have been
battered by weak demand, fierce competition and a stronger yen that
makes exports less competitive.
The three companies
expect a combined loss for the year just ended of $21 billion - more
than Sony's entire market value, which has slumped by close to a fifth
in the past month. Samsung is 10 times more valuable, while Apple, which
Sony executives considered buying in the early 1990s, is worth 30
Sony's.
"It doesn't feel
like an aggressive makeover," said Tetsuro Ii, president of Commons
Asset Management, who oversees some $33 million worth of assets and does
not hold Sony stock.
"You can't really
see the roadmap for how they're going to revive the electronics
business, nor how they're going to create new value."
Sony confirmed
earlier media reports that it will cut around 10,000 jobs - 6 percent of
its global workforce - and take a 75 billion yen ($926 million)
restructuring charge in the current business year to next March. It also
plans to cut fixed costs in the TV business by 60 percent in 2013/14 from last year's levels, and trim 30 percent off the business' operating costs.
"We cannot shy away from difficult decisions," Hirai said.
Eyeing new business
opportunities in the fast-growing medical business, Sony said it was
targeting annual sales of 50 billion yen in 2014/15, eventually doubling
that, and was scouting for acquisitions and other strategic
investments.
Sony is one of
several potential partners that have been linked with disgraced medical
equipment maker Olympus Corp, which has a 70 percent share of the global
market for diagnostic endoscopes and is looking to shore up its
finances after a $1.7 billion accounting fraud.
Sony has held up
endoscopes, enhanced by its own graphics technology, as an example of
new areas it is looking to for growth.
Hirai is looking
for total group sales of 8.5 trillion yen ($105 billion) in 2014/15,
with an operating margin of more than 5 percent.
In February, Hirai said he would widen the PlayStation
gaming console online network to integrate all Sony devices, replacing
three online content delivery platforms it currently operates.
Sony recently
bought 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. It has since launched its first smartphones, the Xperia
series, under the Sony brand.
"Smartphones will
become the hub device," Hirai said on Thursday, vowing to make Sony a
leading player in mobile phones, tripling revenue to 1.8 trillion yen
($22.2 billion) over the next three business years.
Sony said it would also look for potential partners to make batteries for electric vehicles.
"Expanding in
medical and electric vehicles is good because these businesses have
better margins and they're areas that Japan is good at," said Michael
On, managing director at Beyond Asset Management.
The latest job cuts
follow two rounds of layoffs Stringer made in his six-year tenure at
Sony. Chief Financial Officer Masaru Kato noted earlier this week that
around 5,000 workers would come off the Sony payroll with the sale of a
chemicals business and a small liquid crystal display fabricator.
Hirai said some of
the cuts would be in TV, but gave no further details on how he planned
to achieve the cuts he outlined for the business.
Sony shares closed
0.9 percent higher at 1,528 yen on Thursday ahead of the briefing. The
benchmark Nikkei average ended up 0.7 percent. ($1 = 80.9950 Japanese
yen)
(Additional reporting by Mari Saito in TOKYO and Clare Jim in TAIPEI.; Editing by Ian Geoghegan)
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