Sun.Star Davao

Sony buys most of EMI Music, to spend $9B on image sensors

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TOKYO (AP) — Electronic­s and entertainm­ent company Sony Corp. said Tuesday it plans to spend $2.3 billion acquiring an additional 60 percent stake in EMI Music Publishing, home to the Motown catalog and contempora­ry artists like Kanye West, Alicia Keys and Pharrell Williams.

Sony already owns 30 percent of EMI so once the purchase from Mubadala Investment Co. is finalized, it will own 90 percent of the company, CEO Kenichiro Yoshida said in a news conference at Sony's headquarte­rs.

Mubadala is a government­backed investment fund controlled by the emirate of Abu Dhabi, the oil-rich capital of the United Arab Emirates, a seven-state federation that also includes the Mideast commercial hub of Dubai. Its holdings include semiconduc­tor maker Globalfoun­dries, and stakes in General Electric Co., Washington-based private equity firm The Carlyle Group and numerous utility and energy companies.

Outlining the company's revamped strategy to strengthen both its hardware and its creative content, Yoshida said Sony plans to invest 1 trillion yen ($9 billion) mostly in image sensors over the next three years. He said the company's lead in sensors is crucial for evolving technologi­es like self-driving cars and artificial intelligen­ce.

The Tokyo-based maker of the Walkman portable player, Aibo entertainm­ent robot and Bravia TVs has amassed knowhow over the decades when it was leading in "analog technology," said Yoshida, who was named president and chief executive in February. He said Sony's CMOS image sensor excels in its speed, lighting range and absence of noise.

Yoshida said the company's main theme was "getting closer to people," by connecting consumer services and content throughout its sprawling operations, which include the PlayStatio­n game platform, music, films and home entertainm­ent, still and video cameras, cellphones, computer chips and financial services.

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