Sony profit up 6 percent on digital camera, games (Reuters)
5 minutes ago
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's Sony Corp posted a 6 percent rise in quarterly operating profit thanks to strong digital camera sales, but it cut its annual outlook.
Sony enjoyed robust holiday demand for its Cyber-shot digital cameras, Handycam camcorders and Vaio personal computers. But a slowdown in the U.S. economy and a firmer yen have raised investor concerns over its earnings prospects.
Its game business swung to a profit after Sony cut production costs and retail prices of the PlayStation 3 game console and broadened its game software lineup in a bid to catch up with Nintendo Co Ltd's Wii and Microsoft Corp's Xbox 360.
For the year to March, the company cut its operating profit forecast to 410 billion yen ($3.9 billion) from 450 billion yen), compared with the consensus of 446.9 billion yen in a poll of 22 analysts by Reuters Estimates.
Sony, which vies with Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Sharp Corp in flat TVs, has shed 10,000 jobs and a wide range of non-core assets over the past few years in a turnaround effort led by Chief Executive Howard Stringer.
The Tokyo-based company said last year it would sell its production facilities for making key microchips used in the PS3 to Toshiba Corp and stop making rear-projection TVs, once seen as a promising rival of LCD and plasma models.
Operating profit came to 189.36 billion yen in October-December, up from 178.91 billion yen a year earlier. Net profit rose 25 percent to 200.22 billion yen.
Prior to the announcement, shares in Sony closed up 3.6 percent at 5,220 yen, outperforming the Tokyo stock market's electrical machinery index IELEC, which rose 2.7 percent.
Sony shares have fallen 10 percent since October, while the sub-index has tumbled 21 percent.
(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; editing by Louise Heavens)


