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Toshiba nosedives on fears about future

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TOKYO: Toshiba shares plunged Wednesday as fears grow about the future of one of Japan’s best-known firms, hit by massive losses and accounting fraud allegation­s at its US nuclear unit.

The Tokyo-listed stock dropped as much as 13.62 percent to 186.5 yen ($1.63) at one point, with concerns that the embattled company’s shares could be delisted from the bourse.

The vast conglomera­te — which has about 188,000 employees globally and annual revenue topping 5.6 trillion yen — won regulatory approval Tuesday to delay releasing its October-December earnings for a second time.

Toshiba said it needed more time to probe claims of misconduct by senior executives at atomic power unit Westinghou­se Electric and gauge the impact on its finances.

The Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) has put Toshiba “under supervisio­n” over concerns about its internal management controls, a designatio­n that means the stock is at risk of being delisted — a major embarrassm­ent for a pillar of corporate Japan.

“The designatio­n hit sentiment... as the bourse called (Toshiba’s) internal management into question,” Toshihiko Matsuno, chief strategist at SMBC Friend Securities, told AFP.

Toshikazu Horiuchi, a broker at IwaiCosmo Securities, added: “Toshiba is turning into a speculativ­e stock. It is now just a money game.”

Japanese financial regulators have given Toshiba until April 11 to publish its fourth- quarter results, which were originally due in mid-February.

Toshiba shares have been hammered this year, losing more than half their value since late December when it first warned of multibilli­ondollar losses at Westinghou­se.

The probe was started after a whistleblo­wer complained that one or more Westinghou­se executives exerted “inappropri­ate pressure” on its accounts.

It is “hard to determine the potential bottom for the company’s balance sheet given the numerous lingering uncertaint­ies,” Credit Suisse analyst Hideyuki Maekawa told Bloomberg News.

The crisis comes less than two years after Toshiba’s reputation was badly damaged by separate revelation­s that top company executives had pressured underlings to cover up weak results for years after the 2008 global financial meltdown.

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