Bangkok Post

Toshiba appoints ex-banker as CEO

- MAKIKO YAMAZAKI TAIGA URANAKA

TOKYO: Toshiba Corp yesterday appointed a former banker experience­d in dealing with distressed companies as chief executive officer, and forecast its first annual profit in four years, helped by a buoyant chip business that it has agreed to sell.

Incoming CEO Nobuaki Kurumatani, 60, will be tasked with ensuring the smooth sale of the $18 billion chip unit — the world’s No. 2 producer of NAND memory chips and the source of most of its earnings — to a Bain Capital-led consortium despite opposition from some activist shareholde­rs.

The sale, which will see Toshiba retake 40% of the unit, is aimed at putting the conglomera­te back on a firmer footing after a year of crisis stemming from huge losses at its US nuclear unit, and Kurumatani declared his first priority was bolstering the conglomera­te’s finances.

“Firstly, the issue is capital, to help capital recover quickly and return to global competitio­n,” he told a news conference.

Regarded as well-connected with politician­s and bureaucrat­s, Kurumatani currently heads the Japanese arm of private equity firm CVC Capital Partners and before that was an executive at one of Toshiba’s main lenders, Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (SMFG).

While at the bank, he was involved in arranging a government-led bailout plan for Tokyo Electric Power after the 2011 Fukushima earthquake and tsunami disaster.

“His appointmen­t is designed to deal with the activist shareholde­rs because there is no one at Toshiba with the experience to tackle this,” said a financial source familiar with matter, declining to be identified as he was not authorised to speak to media.

Current CEO Satoshi Tsunakawa, who will become chief operating officer and be in charge of day-to-day operations, reiterated that the struggling conglomera­te still intended to sell the unit.

Hong Kong-based activist investor, Argyle Street Management Ltd, a hedge fund with $1.2 billion under management, has opposed the sale, arguing that injections of fresh capital meant it was no longer necessary and that the board should consider an IPO instead. It says it has other investors on its side.

The appointmen­t of Kurumatani, effective from April, comes as Toshiba seeks to recover from the worst year of its 142-year history.

Also helped by the sale of claims against now-bankrupt unit Westinghou­se Electric Co LLC to a group of hedge funds, Toshiba predicted record net profit of 520 billion yen ($4.9 billion) for the financial year ending March.

That is up from a prior forecast of a 110 billion yen loss and much higher than a consensus estimate of a 188 billion yen profit.

The return to profit, combined with an additional 600 billion yen gained from the issue of new shares to overseas funds, will help Toshiba avoid falling into negative net worth for a second consecutiv­e year, allowing it to remain a listed company.

The share issue has helped ease pressure to complete the sale of the chip unit by the end of March — a deadline it is widely viewed as unlikely to meet due to regulatory reviews in China.

If it doesn’t complete the deal by then, it has the option of walking away, sources have said.

The chip unit, the subject of a long and hotly contested auction before the Bain Capital-led consortium was finally chosen, has seen earnings surge on booming demand for semiconduc­tors.

The unit is expected to book an annual operating profit of around 450 billion yen. By contrast, without earnings from the chip unit, Toshiba is expected to post zero operating profit.

 ?? AFP ?? Newly named CEO of Toshiba Corp, Nobuaki Kurumatani, left, shakes hands with current CEO Satoshi Tsunakawa following a press briefing at the company’s headquarte­rs in Tokyo yesterday.
AFP Newly named CEO of Toshiba Corp, Nobuaki Kurumatani, left, shakes hands with current CEO Satoshi Tsunakawa following a press briefing at the company’s headquarte­rs in Tokyo yesterday.

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