Waterloo Region Record

Consortium buys Toshiba’s memory unit

- YURI KAGEYAMA

TOKYO — The buyers of Toshiba Corp.’s memory device operations are promising to invest in technology developmen­t and manufactur­ing facilities to stay competitiv­e, although they stopped short of giving a specific monetary amount or naming a new factory site.

The 2 trillion yen (US$18 billion) deal for the consortium led by Bain Capital Private Equity to acquire Toshiba Memory closed June 1 after clearing antitrust regulatory approval.

Yuji Sugimoto of Bain told reporters Monday the company may change its name to enhance the brand’s image and is aiming for an initial public offering on the Tokyo Stock Exchange within a few years.

Sugimoto said he was also eyeing mergers and acquisitio­ns to expand the company’s business. He said talks have started with Innovation Network Corp. of Japan, a government investment fund, and the Developmen­t Bank of Japan on potential new investment­s, but nothing has been decided.

Japanese interests control a 50.1 per cent stake in the Toshiba memory entity, although investors include SK Hynix of South Korea and American companies like Apple and Dell.

Their potential participat­ion is being scrutinize­d amid fears the flash memory technology developed by Toshiba could be lost to overseas interests.

In particular, Samsung Electronic­s Co. of South Korea is a major rival in the area of memory devices, which are crucial for smartphone­s, IoT or the Internet of Things and other potentiall­y lucrative sectors.

To ensure growth, over the next two years, Toshiba Memory plans to add 500 people with skills in researchin­g and developing memory technology, the company President Yasuo Naruke said. Details were unclear. Toshiba, which also has railroad and nuclear energy units, had sorely needed to sell the memory unit after its U.S. nuclear operations at Westinghou­se Electric Co. filed for bankruptcy last year.

Toshiba’s massive red ink in recent years began with reactors it has been building in the U.S., which remain unfinished, partly because of beefed-up safety regulation­s following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in northeaste­rn Japan.

Toshiba returned to profit for the fiscal year through March, a reversal of the red ink racked up the previous fiscal year.

But the results assumed the completion of the chip sale by the end of June.

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