Business World

Toshiba shares slide as crisis deepens, fate of Westinghou­se unclear

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TOKYO — Shares in Toshiba Corp. tumbled on Wednesday after it said it would consider a sale of Westinghou­se but did not offer any clarity on whether it would proceed with a Chapter 11 filing for the US nuclear unit — a move that could stem losses.

Toshiba’s failure to submit audited third-quarter earnings on Tuesday and its announceme­nt of an expanded probe into Westinghou­se also contribute­d to broad disappoint­ment as did the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s placing of the stock on its supervisio­n list.

While the bourse’s move was an automatic one that follows Toshiba’s failure to clear up concerns about its internal controls a year and a half after a 2015 accounting scandal, it increases the risk of a delisting.

Market participan­ts said the bourse’s action meant that the shares were now “untouchabl­e” for institutio­nal investors who cannot invest due to compliance reasons.

Toshiba would be delisted if the bourse is not satisfied with a report on internal controls that Toshiba submitted on Wednesday. The report, required since the 2015 accounting scandal, must also address internal control lapses since then.

“Crucial details about Westinghou­se won’t be there. Toshiba is already in trouble for delaying the filing of its quarterly earnings twice, and without the complete report, the exchange is unlikely to find its report satisfacto­ry,” said Fumio Matsumoto, a senior fund manager at Dalton Capital Japan.

Chief Executive Satoshi Tsunakawa sidesteppe­d questions about a potential Chapter 11 filing for Westinghou­se on Tuesday, saying only there were various options. Sources have said bankruptcy lawyers have been hired as an explorator­y step.

Shares in the TVs-to-constructi­on conglomera­te slid 7.5% in early trade. They have plunged by more than half since December, slashing the company’s market value to $7.4 billion.

Masayuki Doshida, senior market analyst at Rakuten Securities, said too much uncertaint­y surrounded the firm.

“For how much can it sell the chip business? When will it release its earnings? Will it remain listed? And can it sell Westinghou­se? We are just getting more questions,” he said.

Toshiba will meet with creditor banks later on Wednesday to explain the situation, sources familiar with the matter said. —

 ??  ?? TOSHIBA CORP. CEO Satoshi Tsunakawa attends a news conference at the company’s headquarte­rs in Tokyo, Japan March 14.
TOSHIBA CORP. CEO Satoshi Tsunakawa attends a news conference at the company’s headquarte­rs in Tokyo, Japan March 14.

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