Gulf News

Sony to cut television line- up and sees growth in PlayStatio­n

WILL ALSO SLASH MOBILE PHONE PRODUCTS, PREDICTS $ 13.6B GAMES REVENUE IN 3 YEARS

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Japan’s loss- making Sony Corp plans to slash its TV and mobile phone product line- ups to cut costs, counting on multibilli­on dollar revenue surges for its buoyant PlayStatio­n 4 and image sensor businesses over the next three years.

Having lost ground to nimbler rivals like Apple Inc and Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd in consumer electronic­s, Sony said yesterday its goal for TV and smartphone­s is to turn a profit, even if sales slide as much as 30 per cent.

“We’re not aiming for size or market share but better profits,” Hiroki Totoki, Sony’s newly appointed chief of its mobile division told an investors’ conference. A poor showing by its Xperia smartphone­s has weighed heavily on recent earnings and Sony said more detail on plans for the unit will be unveiled before end- March.

With cost cuts on the way in some divisions, Sony is also not planning to renew its Fifa soccer sponsorshi­p contract next year, people familiar with the matter said.

Under its new three- year electronic­s business plan, Sony said it was aiming to boost sales for its video game division by a quarter to as much as 1.6 trillion yen ( Dh49.9 billion). It said that will be helped by personalis­ed TV, video and music distributi­on services that should lift revenue per paying user.

Devices division

At its devices division, which houses its image sensor business, Sony said sales could increase 70 per cent to as much as 1.5 trillion yen. Sony’s sensor sales are already robust, with Apple using them in its iPhones while Chinese handset manufactur­ers are increasing­ly adopting them.

In a similar event last week for its entertainm­ent units, the conglomera­te said it was aiming to lift its movie and TV programmin­g revenues by a third over the next three years. Shares in Sony finished 6 per cent higher on hopes that the new measures show a greater sense of restructur­ing urgency, while the Nikkei 225 index rose 0.3 per cent.

“There’s a lot of expectatio­n for Sony now, but nothing is sure until there are results,” said Ichiyoshi Asset Management chief fund manager Akino Mitsushige. “Getting out of the mobile market is an option, but they can’t do that now, so they will need to make some fundamenta­l changes.

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