The Phnom Penh Post

Nintendo cuts full-year profit view on sluggish Wii U sales

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NINTENDO cut its full-year outlook yesterday blaming disappoint­ing Wii U game sales and a strong yen, but it remained profitable thanks to the sale of the Seattle Mariners baseball team.

The warning came despite the immense global popularity of the Pokemon Go app this summer, which was downloaded by millions, as the franchise-creator does not own the game’s licence.

The Japanese videogame firm warned its fiscal year operating profit would come in at 30 billion yen, about onethird less than an earlier forecast, while sales would also be lower than expected.

Yesterday, Kyoto-based Nintendo reported a 5.95 billion yen ($57 million) operating loss in the April-September period, the first half of its fiscal year, while revenue dived 33 percent from a year ago.

But the Super Mario maker’s net profit in the latest period jumped more than threefold to 38.3 billion yen, as it booked a one-time gain from the sale of its controllin­g stake in the US baseball team in the summer.

Facing stiff competitio­n from PlayStatio­n 4 maker Sony and the rise in online gaming, Nintendo said earlier this year it would sell the team as it tries to repair its battered finances.

It has owned a stake in the Mariners since the 1990s.

Nintendo’s latest results come days after its shares sank as a sneak peak at its long-awaited new console left gamers and analysts underwhelm­ed.

In a three-minute video posted on its YouTube channel last week, the firm unveiled its hybrid Nintendo Switch which can be played at home and on the go, thanks to a removable screen with the controller­s attached.

The device is due to be released in March, although Nintendo has yet to supply a specific date.

Reviews were mixed, but some described the console as disappoint­ing.

Nintendo is looking for a hit product to offset disappoint­ing sales of its Wii U and related games, as well as its 3DS handheld device.

Six-month sales of the Wii U console more than halved from a year ago, while related game sales were off 33 percent, Nintendo said.

“Income from the sale of its stake in the Mariners is a onetime thing,” Hideki Yasuda, an analyst at Ace Research Institute in Tokyo, said before yesterday’s results.

Japanese firms that do business overseas such as Nintendo have been hit hard by a rally in the yen in recent months, shrinking the value of their foreign-earned come when repatriate­d.

After years of pressure, Nintendo abandoned its consoleson­ly policy and entered into the smartphone game market earlier this year.

In March, it released Miitomo – a free-to-play and interactiv­e game – as it tries to compete in an industry that has increasing­ly gone online.

This summer, it scored a hit with the Pokemon Go app, but the impact on Nintendo’s profits will be limited.

The company is the creator of the Pokemon franchise but the game, released in July, was developed and distribute­d by US-based Niantic, a spinoff of Google.

Nintendo has invested in Niantic and owns about onethird of the Pokemon Company, which receives licensing fees for loaning out the brand.

The Pokemon Go phenomenon helped boost Nintendo’s share price, pushing it above 30,000 yen at one stage, as markets cheered the app’s global success as a positive sign for the long-awaited move into mobile gaming.

Nintendo shares ended down 0.7 percent at 24,520 yen yesterday, before the earnings release. in-

 ?? STEPHEN LAM/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP ?? Shigeru Miyamoto, creative guru at Nintendo and creator of Super Mario, speaks on stage during an Apple launch event in September in San Francisco, California.
STEPHEN LAM/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP Shigeru Miyamoto, creative guru at Nintendo and creator of Super Mario, speaks on stage during an Apple launch event in September in San Francisco, California.

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