Sony Group said it expects operating income of 1.28 trillion yen (S$11.07 billion) in the year to March, missing analyst expectations for both profit and sales as PlayStation 5 hardware sales wane.
The Tokyo-based entertainment leader also said it would buy back up to 2.46 per cent of shares for 250 billion yen. The company will conduct a five-for-one stock split, effective Oct 1, it said in announcing full-year earnings on Tuesday (May 14).
Profit in the most recent quarter was better than expected. Sony said net income in the three months to March was 189 billion yen, above the average analyst estimate of 153.2 billion yen. Sales reached 3.5 trillion yen.
The business in the current year will be bolstered by Sony’s music publishing and smartphone image sensors units, Sony said, both of which benefit from the weaker yen. In music, much of Sony’s revenue comes from streaming of content catalogues including artists like Lil Nas X and Michael Jackson. Spotify Technology reported a 14 per cent jump in paid subscribers for the past quarter, expanding the audience for that material.
Sony makes its image sensors in Japan and sells them overseas. Smartphone markets returned to growth in the March quarter, with the Chinese consumer helping drive a recovery. Mobile makers are again increasing investment in new hardware and components, after whittling down inventories of unsold devices.
Shares in Sony have been under pressure this month as mounting speculation about the terms of its potential US$26 billion bid for Paramount Global has weighed on sentiment. Investors are wary about the costs involved in acquiring Paramount’s film and TV library and integrating the business into Sony’s wider entertainment empire.
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Sony bought Columbia Pictures in 1989. The home to the Spider-Man and Ghostbusters franchises is the only major Hollywood studio without a general entertainment streaming service. An acquisition of Paramount would significantly increase its exposure to traditional TV channels, which have been losing viewers to streaming.
The Paramount takeover is one of several deals Sony is engineering, as the Japanese company seeks to expand its digital content collection. While a merger with India’s Zee Entertainment collapsed this year, Sony is bidding against private equity funds Blackstone and KKR for control of Japanese e-comics provider Infocom in a deal estimated to be worth around US$1.3 billion.
In the core games business, the PlayStation 5’s upcoming game pipeline appears questionable, as Sony has said it won’t release any titles from its biggest first-party franchises like God of War or Bloodborne in the year to March. The company’s executives have also said that the console, released in 2020, is now on the downslope of hardware sales – setting the stage for a potential updated edition for the holiday period this year.
Sony sold 4.5 million PS5 consoles in the March quarter. Active users on its PlayStation Network declined to 118 million in the period. PlayStation 5 exclusives, such as Square Enix Holdings’ Final Fantasy VII Rebirth, have not performed well in recent times, pushing publishers like Square Enix away from locking their content down on a single platform. BLOOMBERG