Toronto Star

POKEMON WOE

Nintendo announced its widely anticipate­d accessory for the popular app will be delayed,

- YUJI NAKAMURA, TAKASHI AMANO AND PAVEL ALPEYEV BLOOMBERG

For Nintendo Co., it’s becoming one Pokemon No after another.

After telling investors last week that they won’t be able to rely on Pokemon Go to bolster profits, the company said on Wednesday that a widely anticipate­d accessory for the hit app will be delayed until September. Pokemon Go Plus, a 3,500 yen ($44 Canadian) Bluetooth gadget that helps users detect nearby virtual pocket monsters, was supposed to be Nintendo’s one measurable benefit from the explosive popularity of the game. It was set to go on sale in Japan this week, until Nintendo, Pokemon Co. and developer Niantic Inc. pushed back the accessory’s debut.

Not only did that send Nintendo shares down as much as13 per cent in German trade, it will probably force analysts to adjust their estimates, which were already in disarray because of the lack of clarity over how Pokemon Go will impact the company’s bottom line.

Still, Nintendo maintained its outlook for 35 billion yen in profit for the current fiscal year when it reported earnings shortly after announcing the delay.

“The delay is disappoint­ing, especially since it’s just a Bluetooth accessory that has already been available for preorder,” said Atul Goyal, an analyst at Jefferies Group. “The sales will still accrue to Nintendo with a delay. Just as all eyes turn to Nintendo, the company’s management can’t seem to get their communicat­ion right.”

Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities Co. esti mated that Pokemon Go Plus would add 45 billion yen in sales and 8.2 billion yen in income to Nintendo for the current fiscal year, based on its original sale date. Analysts at Bank of America Corp. were predicting an additional 10.5 billion yen in profit.

“Is Nintendo really not even capa- ble of producing a low-end accessory these days?” said Serkan Toto, founder of consultant Kantan Games Inc.

“It has now delayed the launch to a time when at least the initial hype around the game will definitely be over. In contrast to Pokemon Go earnings, Nintendo would have pocketed most of the margin for the device.”

While the Pokemon Go Plus delay was announced in Japan and the U.S., it wasn’t clear what the impact would be in other places where the game has debuted.

What could weigh even further on Nintendo is the net loss of 24.5 billion yen it reported for the first quarter, which ended in June and was wider than analyst projection­s for a loss of 3.4 billion yen.

Profitabil­ity was dragged down by sluggish demand for Wii U consoles and a stronger yen, and uncertaint­y over how much the Kyoto-based company will benefit from Pokemon Go.

The current fiscal year marks the biggest test yet of Nintendo’s ambitions to reinvent itself in mobile games. After resisting smartphone­s for years, it plans to release five titles through March 2017, including two by the end of this year. Its first release, messaging app Miitomo, has received a tepid response from users.

Unlike the upcoming titles, Pokemon Go was developed by San Francisco-based Niantic and Pokemon Co., which is 32 per cent owned by Nintendo.

While excitement over the game’s popularity at one point more than doubled Nintendo’s market value, shares have since corrected as the company pared back expectatio­ns, saying financial impact will be “limited.”

Roughly 13 per cent of Pokemon Go sales should flow to Nintendo, according to an estimate by David Gibson, an analyst at Macquarie Securities in Tokyo. Details of the game’s financial contributi­on should become clearer with its results for the September quarter, which covers the period since Pokemon Go’s release.

“I think it will sell well, but it’s just a piece of plastic and it’s not likely to move the needle,” said Amir Anvarzadeh, Singapore-based head of Japanese equity sales at BGC Partners Inc. The accessory’s delay “may be because the volumes of production they planned are just far too small for how big the game has gotten.”

Besides the foray into smartphone­s, Nintendo is also planning to launch a new console — dubbed NX — in March 2017. It didn’t provide new details or forecasts for the platform. It maintained sales forecasts for its existing Wii U console at 800,000 units, and five million shipments for the mobile handset 3DS.

Revenue from hardware fell 44 per cent to 25.1 billion yen, while sales of software for the platforms declined 22 per cent to 34.9 billion yen.

“The bad numbers were to be expected. At the moment, Nintendo has nothing to show for: no new hit games, still disappoint­ing hardware sales, and only failed communicat­ions app Miitomo on mobile devices,” Toto said.

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 ?? KIM KYUNG-HOON/REUTERS ?? Pokemon Go Plus, a gadget that helps users detect nearby virtual pocket monsters, won’t be launched this week.
KIM KYUNG-HOON/REUTERS Pokemon Go Plus, a gadget that helps users detect nearby virtual pocket monsters, won’t be launched this week.

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