Texarkana Gazette

Toshiba’s survival in doubt amid Westinghou­se troubles

-

TOKYO—Toshiba Corp., whose U.S. nuclear unit Westinghou­se Electric Co. has filed for bankruptcy protection, raised doubts Tuesday about its ability to survive as a company.

In an unaudited financial report, Toshiba projected a 1.01 trillion yen ($9.2 billion) loss for the fiscal year that ended in March, a figure that ballooned from the 390 billion yen loss forecast in February because of the troubles at Westinghou­se . Four nuclear reactors Westinghou­se is helping to build in South Carolina and Georgia are behind schedule and billions of dollars over budget.

Toshiba said its recent financial losses have reduced its assets, resulting in downgrades by credit rating agencies and a breach in the terms of some loans. In addition, the Tokyo company said it counts on a special constructi­on business license from the Japanese government and warned that a renewal after this year depends on meeting certain financial criteria.

Thus, Toshiba said, “there are material events and conditions that raise the substantia­l doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern .”

Toshiba, whose products include computer chips and household appliances, acquired Westinghou­se in 2006 with much fanfare, making nuclear power an important part of its business strategy.

Instead, Westinghou­se has saddled the company with mounting losses. President Satoshi Tsunakawa has said the strategy based on Westinghou­se was a mistake. He has also promised the company will not take on new nuclear projects.

Beyond Westinghou­se, costs soared after the nuclear disaster in Fukushima because of growing safety concerns and stricter regulation­s. Toshiba still faces the challenge of decommissi­oning the plant, which sank into multiple meltdowns after the 2011 tsunami in northeaste­rn Japan. A souring of sentiment toward nuclear power in some countries, weaker oil prices and the growing appeal of natural gas have also hurt its nuclear energy-based business strategy.

Toshiba, among Japan’s most prestigiou­s companies for decades, in recent years has been selling off some of its choicest businesses to survive. The Wall Street Journal, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter, said iPhone contractor Foxconn has offered up to 3 trillion yen ($27 billion) for Toshiba’s computer-chip business.

Toshiba’s unaudited results showed it racked up a 532.5 billion yen ($4.8 billion) loss for the April-December 2016 period. The results came late because Toshiba’s auditor, Pricewater­houseCoope­rs Aarata, had questioned figures surroundin­g the acquisitio­n of U.S. nuclear constructi­on company CB&I Stone and Webster after a whistleblo­wer, an employee at Westinghou­se, wrote a letter to the Westinghou­se president. After two delays already, Toshiba went ahead and issued the report Tuesday without the auditor’s blessing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States