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Toshiba warns on profit after Q3 slump; COO resigns over expenses – One America News Network


By Makiko Yamazaki and Mayu Sakoda

TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan’s Toshiba Corp cut its annual earnings estimate after third-quarter profit slumped and its chief operating officer resigned over the inappropriate use of entertainment expenses.

The weak performance and the departure of Goro Yanase come at a time when the scandal-ridden industrial conglomerate is assessing a binding buyout proposal from a consortium led by private equity firm Japan Industrial Partners (JIP).

The sluggish results “would make it hard for a bidder to offer a high price (for a buyout),” said Yoshiharu Izumi, senior equity analyst at SBI Securities.

Hit by weak demand for hard disk drives from data centre customers, Toshiba said quarterly operating profit fell 88% to 5.3 billion yen ($40.4 million), far below the Refinitiv consensus estimate of 37 billion yen.

The industrial conglomerate also took a large charge relating to an old project for its power generation systems business, as well as an appraisal loss on a further drop in printer unit Toshiba Tec Corp’s share prices.

Its profit estimate for the year ending in March was cut by a quarter to 95 billion yen.

Adding to the woes, Kioxia Holdings Corp, a memory chip maker 40.6% owned by Toshiba, slipped to a net loss of 84.6 billion yen in the quarter, due to weak demand for personal computers and smartphones.

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Toshiba said Yanase had resigned over the inappropriate use of entertainment expenses in 2019 when he was an executive at a company unit.

Toshiba declined to comment on details of the JIP proposal, but board chairperson Akihiro Watanabe said in a statement it was “important to reach a final conclusion on the strategic alternatives of the company as soon as possible and to start working towards a new stage.”

The JIP consortium submitted its formal proposal last week, after sources said the investors had secured 1.4 trillion yen in loan commitments for their buyout including a commitment line of 200 billion yen for working capital.

The final buyout proposal would also include an equity portion of about 1 trillion yen, the sources said, adding that many details of the potential deal have to yet to be fixed.

A buyout, if successful, would draw a line under years of upheaval for the industrial conglomerate ranging from accounting scandals, heavy losses, corporate governance concerns as well as friction with activist investors that led to a strategic review.

($1 = 131.8800 yen)

(Reporting by Makiko Yamazaki; Editing by Edwina Gibbs and Mike Harrison)

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By: OAN

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