CIVIL NUCLEAR
Toshiba posts $4.4 bn full-year loss on nuclear writedown
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) May 12, 2016


Toshiba said Thursday that it suffered a $4.4 billion full-year net loss as the troubled conglomerate booked a massive write-down of its US nuclear unit, but said the worst was over as it forecast profits for the current business year.

A once proud pillar of corporate Japan, Toshiba has been besieged by problems, most notably a profit-padding scandal in which bosses for years systematically pushed subordinates to cover-up weak financial results.

In an intensive makeover effort, the company has been shedding businesses and announced in March it sold its medical devices unit to camera and office equipment maker Canon.

Toshiba said its net loss for the year to March soared to 483.2 billion yen ($4.4 billion) from 37.8 billion yen a year earlier.

Sales decreased 7.3 percent to 5.7 trillion yen for the fiscal year, while it incurred a 719.1 billion yen operating loss, reversing from an operating profit of 188.4 billion yen a year earlier.

Toshiba said the net loss was mainly due to a slump in its electric and social infrastructure sector, including nuclear power businesses, as well as extra costs related to its restructuring.

The company had already announced a write-down of 260 billion yen at its US nuclear unit Westinghouse after a rise in financing costs, but has said that 665.5 billion yen in revenue from the sale of the medical devices unit to Canon outweighed the negative impact.

Toshiba said it would return to the black for the year to March 2017, projecting a net profit of 100 billion yen and operating profit of 120 billion yen, while sales are expected to edge down to 5.1 trillion yen.

It said the expected recovery was based on efforts to concentrate on its profitable businesses, while it forecast its nuclear power and other energy units would improve.

Last week, Toshiba appointed a new president to steer it past the accounting scandal that has hammered its reputation.

Company veteran Satoshi Tsunakawa, 60, a senior vice president who joined Toshiba in 1979, will replace incumbent chief Masashi Muromachi in June, it said.

si/kgo/eb

TOSHIBA

CANON

.


Related Links
Nuclear Power News - Nuclear Science, Nuclear Technology
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

Previous Report
CIVIL NUCLEAR
Ancient glass-glued walls studied for nuke waste solutions
Pullman WA (SPX) Apr 29, 2016
The modern challenge of nuclear waste storage and disposal has researchers at Washington State University looking back at ancient materials from around the world. They report on their work studying ancient glass and rock defense walls in a paper published in the May issue of American Ceramic Society Bulletin. At the Hanford nuclear site in eastern Washington, the U.S. Department of Energy ... read more


CIVIL NUCLEAR
China, Russia rap US missile defence plan in S. Korea

Army developing new air defense system

Planned US Missile Defense Units in Asia-Pacific Threaten China, Russia

Lockheed Martin tests Aegis on Australian destroyer

CIVIL NUCLEAR
This is Why Russia's S-500 Air Defense System Makes Pentagon Nervous

New U.S. Navy testing of Norwegian missile

France approved for additional Hellfire missiles

Possible Australian missile buy gets State Dept. approval

CIVIL NUCLEAR
K-MAX optionally piloted helos deployed to Arizona

Bats' flight technique could lead to better drones

AeroVironment Unveils Mantis i45 EO IR Gimbal Payload for Puma AE

Mexico flies Arcturus fixed-wing VTOL UAV

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Harris providing advanced satcom terminals to Army

Elbit receives European order for tactical radios

Haigh-Farr showcases Antenna Solutions at DATT Summit

U.S. Army orders radios for Mid-East, African countries

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Two female US Marines assigned to infantry

Navy SEALs grab limelight in years since bin Laden death

Germany orders soldier training systems

GXV-T revs up research into smarter armored ground vehicles

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Nordic countries sign joint procurement agreement

Black cadets cause West Point stir with raised fists

Australia gets Singapore defence investment boost

Nigeria says lost $15 bn in military procurement fraud

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Queen calls Chinese delegation 'very rude'

NATO aims to 'destabilise' Caucasus with Georgia drills: Moscow

Nicaragua's list of ambitious projects

China to join US-led naval exercise: US official

CIVIL NUCLEAR
Little ANTs: Researchers build the world's tiniest engine

New movies from the microcosmos

Ultra-long, one-dimensional carbon chains are synthesised for the first time

Rice introduces Teslaphoresis to help assemble Nanotubes