Panasonic posts $10 billion loss

Panasonic said Friday it booked a loss of nearly $10 billion for the fiscal year that ended March 31, the largest ever loss by a Japanese manufacturer according to local media.

The Osaka-based electronics firm is in the midst of company-wide restructuring that includes the continued integration of Sanyo Electric and a shift to green technologies such as solar power and rechargeable batteries. It is also implementing a management shift, with Kazuhiro Tsuga, the head of its consumer electronics and TV business, to take over as President from Fumio Ohtsubo in June.

Panasonic, like many of its domestic rivals, is struggling to make its consumer products profitable as price drops squeeze margins. The company’s results announcement comes a day after Sony said it booked a record net loss last fiscal year. Both companies are weighed down by their loss-making TV businesses, with Panasonic paying for heavy bets it has made on plasma flat-screen technology.

Like Sony, Panasonic predicts a recovery in the current fiscal year: It is targeting a few billion dollar profit, less than one per cent of its revenue forecast.

Panasonic said it swung to $9.7 billion in the red, down from a a modest billion dollar profit a year earlier. While much of the massive loss came from one-off restructuring charges and tax expenses, the company saw revenue fall 10 per cent and operating profit, often viewed as a reflection of actual business performance, plunge 86 per cent.

The loss is the biggest ever for a Japanese manufacturing company, according to Kyodo News agency and local newspapers.

The company’s restructuring plan includes closing over half of its TV panel production lines and reducing its number of workers through voluntary retirement offers and transfers to outside companies. It has said it will combine its myriad of businesses into three main divisions: consumer, electronic components, and a “solutions” division that targets large projects in areas such as health care and manufacturing.

As with many Japanese companies, Panasonic’s fiscal year runs from April to March.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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