The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Japan’s tech giant Toshiba to split, sell stake in Carrier

- By Yuri Kageyama Yuri Kageyama is on Twitter: https://twitter. com/yurikageya­ma

Embattled Japanese technology giant Toshiba plans to split into two companies, one focused on infrastruc­ture and the other on devices, in its latest effort to placate unhappy shareholde­rs.

As part of the proposed plan, Tokyo-based Toshiba Corp. intends to sell its joint venture stake in Toshiba Carrier Corp. to the U.S.-based Carrier Group, for about 100 billion yen ($877 million). Toshiba is also selling Toshiba Elevator and Building Systems Corp. and Toshiba Lighting & Technology Corp., it said Monday.

The proposal is still subject to shareholde­r and regulatory approval. Toshiba scrapped its earlier proposal for a threeway split, which was not popular with some shareholde­rs.

Toshiba once was one of Japan’s most revered brands but has been struggling since the Fukushima nuclear disaster in March 2011. A tsunami sent three reactors into meltdowns, spewing radiation over an area that’s still partly a no-go zone. Toshiba is involved in the decommissi­oning effort, which will take decades.

The company’s reputation also was tarnished by an accounting scandal. Its chief executive resigned in 2015 to take responsibi­lity after company officials doctored accounting books for years, having set unrealisti­c earnings targets.

Toshiba said it will provide 300 billion yen ($2.6 billion) of excess capital as shareholde­r returns for two years.

Chief Executive Satoshi Tsunakawa acknowledg­ed the announceme­nt came about after “further engaging with key stakeholde­rs.”

That includes foreign funds that objected to the earlier restructur­ing plan.

The plan says that Toshiba/Infrastruc­ture Service Co., which includes its energy businesses, and Device Co., encompassi­ng computer chips and storage, will be stand-alone companies with “distinct visions.”

Atul Goyal, an equity analyst at Jefferies, said the moves are a step in the right direction for Toshiba, and urged speedy action.

“These are some encouragin­g signs,” he said, noting that selling non-core businesses can highlight “the company’s commitment to shareholde­r returns.”

If approved, the restructur­ing is to be completed by the second half of fiscal 2023. Toshiba is expecting to report a 150 billion yen ($1.3 billion) profit for the fiscal year through March.

 ?? SHUJI KAJIYAMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
SHUJI KAJIYAMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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