Sony up despite Playstation woes

Sony said today its quarterly profit more than trebled after strong digital camera sales and a softer yen far outstripped losses…

Sony said today its quarterly profit more than trebled after strong digital camera sales and a softer yen far outstripped losses at its game unit.

Sony, in the final year of a three-year turnaround plan led by Chief Executive Howard Stringer, has seen its PlayStation 3 game console outsold by Nintendo's Wii since the two machines were launched late last year.

But Sony's Cyber-shot digital cameras were in strong demand. The electronics and entertainment

Sony's Playstation 3
Sony's Playstation 3

conglomerate also benefitted from a weaker yen and a firmer stock market, which has boosted earnings at its financial division.

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"They didn't have much in the way of new products during the quarter but they seem to have done quite well despite that. Overall, the results leave a good impression" said Koichi Ogawa, chief portfolio manager at Daiwa SB Investments.

Sony, competing with Canon Inc. in the digital camera market and Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. in the liquid crystal display (LCD) TV industry, earned an operating profit of 99.32 billion yen ($825.6 million) in April-June, up from 27.05 billion a year earlier.

This is a turnaround from an operating loss of 113.4 billion yen in the previous three months, when Sony booked losses at its once high-flying game unit.

But Sony stuck to its operating profit forecast of 440 billion yen for the year to March 2008, up sharply from 71.75 billion a year earlier, when it was hit by hefty costs for launching the PS3 and recalling laptop PC batteries.

The company forecast exceeds a consensus of 423.7 billion yen in a poll of 20 analysts by Reuters Estimates.

In contrast, Nintendo raised its annual operating profit outlook by 37 percent to 370 billion yen on Wednesday, beating market expectations and closing in on Sony's outlook.

Sony, locked in a three-way battle with Nintendo and Microsoft Corp. in the $30 billion video game market, cut the US price of the PS3 by $100 this month to ignite demand.

The new price is still twice as high as the Wii and some industry executives said the price cut is unlikely to drive game console sales substantially.

Sony's Chief Financial Officer Nobuyuki Oneda said the PS3's performance fell short of expectations in the first quarter but expressed hope that a cut to the price of its 60-gigabyte model and the upcoming launch of an 80-gigabyte model would boost demand.