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Teh One Who Knocks
05-23-2011, 12:58 PM
By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press


TOKYO – Sony Corp. is expecting an annual loss of $3.2 billion, reversing its earlier projection of a return to profit, as the electronics giant struggles with production disruptions from Japan's tsunami and a hacker attack on its online gaming service.

The Japanese maker of PlayStation 3 video game machines and Bravia flat-panel TVs said Monday that the projection of a 260 billion yen ($3.2 billion) net loss for the fiscal year ended March 2011 was largely due to writing off 360 billion yen ($4.4 billion) related to a tax credit booked in a previous quarter.

Sony announced the loss ahead of its official earnings announcement Thursday under Tokyo Stock Exchange guidelines. The company had earlier projected a 70 billion yen ($860 million) profit.

Like many other Japanese manufacturers, Sony has been hampered by the production disruptions set off by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that killed more than 25,000 people, destroyed many factories and sent the nation's economic recovery into reverse.

The company kept its operating profit forecast unchanged at 200 billion yen ($2.46 billion). It expects to report sales of 7.18 trillion yen ($88.2 billion), slightly down from an earlier projection of 7.2 trillion yen ($88.5 billion).

Masaru Kato, Sony's chief financial officer, said parts shortages in the aftermath of the disaster have eased but a full recovery hasn't yet been realized.

"In the first quarter, we saw quite a major impact on our manufacturing activities," he said. After the quake, "negative factors have grown bigger" and offset earlier improvement in the previously loss-making games division, dashing hopes for a profit.

Tokyo-based Sony also faced a new challenge to its reputation following a massive security breach affecting more than 100 million online accounts.

After temporarily closing down its online gaming services last month, Sony began restoring its PalyStation Network services in the U.S. and Europe on May 15 mainly for online gaming, chat and music streaming services.

Sony spent 14 billion yen ($170 million) to cover costs that included identity theft insurance for customers, improvements to network security, free access to content, customer support and an investigation into the hacking.

Sony has seen plunging sales of flat-panel TVs and other gadgets, and was likely to remain in the red in its TV business for the seventh year straight.

Sony has also taken a beating in music players and other portable devices to Apple's iPod, iPhone and iPad.

The company booked a 40.8 billion yen ($439 million) loss for the fiscal year ended March 2010 after a 98.9 billion yen loss the year before_ Sony's first annual red ink in 14 years.

Deepsepia
05-23-2011, 03:03 PM
I'm old enough to remember when Sony could do no wrong -- they were the juggernaut building the cool toys everyone wanted. Today? They just seem adrift . . . I mean, Microsoft, hardly the most adroit of competitors, has been able to take away massive market share from them in gaming . . . the only competitive market where Microsoft has done well.

DemonGeminiX
05-23-2011, 03:22 PM
My Mom used to work for Sony in Pitman, NJ. She was just told by one of her former coworkers that they closed the plant down.

Arkady Renko
05-23-2011, 04:03 PM
way of the world, empires rise, rule for a while, become decadent and are annihilated by barbarians

Deepsepia
05-23-2011, 04:17 PM
My Mom used to work for Sony in Pitman, NJ. She was just told by one of her former coworkers that they closed the plant down.

That place used to produce CDs, right?

Bil Gates hasn't been right about all that many predictions, but he did nail one-- at the time of the introduction of Blu-Ray/HD he commented that this was the last physical media format the world would see.

Kinda mind blowing when you think about it

Arkady Renko
05-23-2011, 04:55 PM
maybe the last physical consumer media, but stuff will always have to be stored on hardware somewhere.

Deepsepia
05-23-2011, 05:20 PM
maybe the last physical consumer media, but stuff will always have to be stored on hardware somewhere.

But not as a physical format. Think of digital pix-- there are now billions of them, which have never been in a physical format "DCM_xxx_yyyy.jpg" is the way your photos "live" now-- yeah, they're "stored" somewhere, but just as data, not as a discrete physical format.

DemonGeminiX
05-23-2011, 05:47 PM
That place used to produce CDs, right?

Bil Gates hasn't been right about all that many predictions, but he did nail one-- at the time of the introduction of Blu-Ray/HD he commented that this was the last physical media format the world would see.

Kinda mind blowing when you think about it

Yep, I believe it was the main facility for their CD production. Not anymore.