Sony Projects Increased Gaming Profits Despite Sales Decline

Sony Projects Increased Gaming Profits Despite Sales Decline

Synopsis

Sony anticipates a profit jump of 11% to 1.6 trillion yen by March 2027. The company expects lower sales in its gaming division but higher profits due to strong software releases. Sony will also buy back shares worth up to 500 billion yen. Investors are watching chip prices and supply chain issues.
Sony forecast on Friday a higher annual operating profit but lower sales in its gaming business, with overall profit expected to climb 11% to 1.6 trillion yen ($10.20 billion) for the year ending March 2027.

While the PlayStation maker has received plaudits for its transformation into an entertainment powerhouse, market concern about the impact of artificial intelligence on its business and a perceived lack of growth catalysts have weighed on its ‌shares in recent ⁠months.

Sony said ⁠it would spend up to 500 billion yen buying back up to 230 million shares. The group's shares pared losses ​and were up 2% in Tokyo.

Investors are also fretting about the impact of a memory-chip price surge and disruption to supply chains from the Iran war on margins at electronics manufacturers including Sony and peer Nintendo, which also reports on Friday.

Sony said it expected sales at its gaming business to fall ​6% on lower hardware sales with profits to rise 30% to ⁠137 billion ‌yen due to higher first-party software sales and the absence of an impairment ​loss it recorded ​a year earlier.

PlayStation 5 hardware sales are based on the amount of ⁠memory it can secure at "reasonable prices", with hardware profitability expected to ​be similar to a year earlier.

The firm said it sold 16 million ​PS5 consoles in the last financial year, 14% fewer than a year earlier.

Sony said in February it has secured the minimum quantity of memory needed to manage the year-end shopping season. Nintendo said that month the chip-price surge is not significantly impacting earnings but could pressure profitability if it persists over the long term.

In March, Sony announced it would hike PS5 console prices, including a $100 ‌bump in the United States, for the second time in less than a year.

Its platform is expected to receive a major boost from the launch of Take-Two ​Interactive's delayed "Grand Theft ​Auto VI", which is ⁠scheduled for release in November.

"Sony's bottom line stands to benefit significantly from the high-margin software sales and ecosystem engagement this launch should trigger," Amir Anvarzadeh of Asymmetric Advisors wrote in a note.

Sony also said ​it sees higher profits at its pictures and chips units but lower profits at its music business.

The group reported operating profit for the year ended March rose 13.4% to 1.45 trillion yen, below an LSEG consensus estimate of 1.56 trillion yen.

While Sony's growing businesses include anime, which is finding a global audience, the company has abandoned plans to launch electric vehicles with automaker Honda.

($1 = 156.8900 yen)

This editorial summary reflects ET Tech and other public reporting on Sony Projects Increased Gaming Profits Despite Sales Decline.

Reviewed by WTGuru editorial team.