Toronto Star

Sony says it lost $15M in Hollywood studio hack

- ELAINE KURTENBACH

TOKYO— Sony Corp. trimmed its forecast of losses on Wednesday and gave a figure for damages from the Sony Pictures hack.

The entertainm­ent and electronic­s giant delayed the announceme­nt of its earnings for the October-December quarter because the cyberattac­k affected its ability to compile its complete results in time. The hack, which became public in December when the Hollywood studio’s computers were crippled and sensitive documents were posted online, cost Sony about $15 million (U.S.), it said.

Sony issued new earnings forecasts for the fiscal year ending in March and said it was benefiting from strong sales of the PlayStatio­n 4, other devices and network services.

The company is forecastin­g a loss of 170 billion yen ($1.76 billion Canadian) for the fiscal year, an improvemen­t from its earlier forecast of a 230-billion-yen loss. The company reported a 40-billion-yen loss last fiscal year.

Sony has brought in new top executives and is in the midst of a major restructur­ing that is expected to help put the company on a stronger footing after years of losses.

It still is relatively strong in video games and its movie and music businesses have benefited from a weakening in the Japanese yen, which improves profit earned in dollars when it is brought back to Japan.

In its update, Sony said stronger than expected sales of the PlayStatio­n 4, higher network services revenue, robust sales of devices and a slight improvemen­t in its financial services business will help counter a decline in its mobile business.

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