Morning Sun

Sony hikes outlook as games help offset smartphone weakness

- By Takashi Mochizuki and Yuki Furukawa

Sony raised its full-year forecast as its Playstatio­n and entertainm­ent arms sustained momentum even as a sluggish global economy hurt other operations.

Boosted by a weaker yen, the Tokyo-based company nudged up its net income forecast by 2% to ¥860 billion ($6 billion), closer to but still missing analyst estimates. Sony also revised up its sales outlook by 6% to ¥12.2 trillion. It left its full-year operating profit outlook unchanged.

Supply constraint­s that dogged the Playstatio­n 5 since the game console’s launch in 2020 are now history, and Sony is working to catch up on lost time. The company sold 3.3 million units in the June quarter and needs to build out its PS5 user base to entice more developers to create specifical­ly for the platform.

“Sales momentum for the PS5 slowed from the previous quarter, and that’s going to make it tough for Sony to hit a target of 25 million units this fiscal year,” said Toyo Securities analyst Hideki Yasuda. “Sony would need to cut prices or release new models to keep its games business momentum intact.”

The conglomera­te, whose operations span movies, financial services and electronic components, said momentum in the PS5 began picking up in July after slowing down in the June quarter. The PS5, Sony’s most important product, has been the best-selling console in the U.S. this year in both unit and dollar

terms, according to data from Circana.

Achieving PS5 sales of 25 million units this fiscal year remains the company’s priority, Sony Senior Vice President Naomi Matsuoka said during an earnings call Wednesday. “We will take the steps necessary to achieve that goal.”

Outside its core games division, Sony cut its outlook on its image sensors, used widely in smartphone­s to create photos and videos. A recovery in China’s smartphone market is taking longer than expected, and demand is worsening in the U.S., it said.

“We expected the smartphone market to start recovering from the second half of this fiscal year, but now we don’t see that happening until at least the next year,” said Sadahiko Hayakawa, senior general

manager in charge of Sony’s finance department.

The company’s image sensor business is facing significan­t head winds. Key customer Apple said at its most recent earnings report that its iphone is also facing suppressed demand. Some manufactur­ing yield issues of Sony’s camera sensors also posed a challenge for iphone 15 production, Bloomberg News previously reported.

The global economic slowdown and geopolitic­al risks are spurring Sony to remain cautious on its outlook, executives said.

“We see various risks and uncertaint­ies for months to come, including risks in our hardware businesses, from electronic­s to sensors to Playstatio­n 5s,” Sony Chief Operating Officer Hiroki Totoki said.

Sony reported betterthan-expected

operating profit in its fiscal first quarter of ¥253 billion, surpassing analyst estimates of ¥242.3 billion. Revenue was ¥2.96 trillion, 33% up from last year’s ¥2.2 trillion in the same period.

The Japanese entertainm­ent conglomera­te has been beefing up its content offerings in recent years, though the biggest hits of the summer have come from its rivals from Activision Blizzard’s Diablo IV to Warner Bros. Pictures’ “Barbie,” a film that Sony previously held the rights to.

Console rival Microsoft’s takeover of Activision is also nearing conclusion, though the near-term impact of that deal on Sony’s business is likely negligible as the companies have agreed to keep Call of Duty on Playstatio­n consoles for at least a decade.

 ?? AKIO KON — BLOOMBERG ?? A Sony Group Corp. Playstatio­n 5 (PS5) video game console displayed at the Sony Shop Tec Staff store in Tokyo, Japan, on May 7, 2022.
AKIO KON — BLOOMBERG A Sony Group Corp. Playstatio­n 5 (PS5) video game console displayed at the Sony Shop Tec Staff store in Tokyo, Japan, on May 7, 2022.

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