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Analyst: Worst is over on Pokemon outlook

Maeda predicts hit game to deliver $191-$287m to the company’s bottom line this fiscal

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The worldwide success of Pokemon Go is finally making a believer out of Nintendo Co.’s most bearish analyst.

SMBC Nikko Securities Inc.’s Eiji Maeda had an underperfo­rm rating on the company’s stock and the lowest price target among 15 Nintendo analysts tracked by Bloomberg. But in a report published on Thursday, he says the worst is over for the Kyoto-based company, after shares tumbled last week by the most in 27 years. Maeda upgraded his outlook to neutral and raised his price target, citing the prospects for higher profits from Pokemon Go and upcoming titles.

Despite his estimate that only seven per cent of Pokemon Go’s sales go to Nintendo, he expects the hit game to begin delivering 20 billion to 30 billion yen ($191-$287 million) to the company’s bottom line this fiscal year. Maeda also cited the launch of the NX console, which should begin generating returns after it debuts early next year. He raised his price target to 21,500 yen from 14,500 yen, compared with yesterday’s close at 21,505 yen.

Still, he pared his optimism, saying he wants to see whether upcoming smartphone games can recreate the success of Pokemon Go. “While positives appear to have played out for a while now that the Pokemon GO smartphone game boom has been priced in, we believe negatives have also been aired,” Maeda wrote in the July 28 report. “We expect the market’s focus to shift from Pokemon GO to the Animal Crossing and Fire Emblem smartphone games that are due for release in autumn 2016 and the nextgenera­tion NX console that is due to go on sale in March 2017.”

Nintendo’s stock reversed losses yesterday morning and rose 2 per cent yesterday.

Analysts at the world’s biggest investment banks have struggled to keep up with the wild gyrations in Nintendo’s shares as the Pokemon Go craze has taken hold. Several analysts cut their price targets before the game’s debut in early July, only to reverse course days later as the stock surged. Two banks set price targets at more than 40,000 yen or almost double the current level.

Despite yesterday’s gain, Nintendo shares dropped 24 per cent for the week, the worst weekly performanc­e since September 1989. Investors dumped the stock after the company a week ago said financial impact from Pokemon Go will be “limited,” then last week posted a quarterly loss that was wider than expected and delayed the release of an accessory for the game. Still, selling pressure appears to be abating. Short positions in Nintendo dropped to 4.7 per cent of its free-float stock as of Wednesday, according to research firm IHS Markit.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Gamers enter Nintendo’s store at Rockefelle­r Center in New York. With Pokemon Go, Nintendo is expected to capture a larger share of the $57 billion mobile gaming market.
Bloomberg Gamers enter Nintendo’s store at Rockefelle­r Center in New York. With Pokemon Go, Nintendo is expected to capture a larger share of the $57 billion mobile gaming market.

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