Nintendo Wii Sales Lose Momentum Despite Price Cut
Japanese video game and console maker Nintendo Co. reports fiscal first half earnings on Thursday. The following is a summary of key developments and analyst opinion related to the period.
OVERVIEW: Nintendo, whose profits have gained every year for the last five years, may be facing a loss of momentum in sales of its Wii home console.
Rivals Sony Corp. and Microsoft Corp. have not only come up with similar wandlike controllers that track player’s motions but they have plus slashed prices on their offerings, the PlayStation 3 and the Xbox 360 machines.
To stay competitive, Nintendo, which additionally makes Super Mario and Pokemon game software, recently cut the Wii price to 20,000 yen ($217) from 25,000 yen ($272) in Japan and to $200 from $250 in the U.S. But an earlier price cut for the Sony PlayStation 3 to about $300 has been effective in boosting its sales.
The Wii is now about the same price as
The strengthening yen is another factor hurting the bottom line of export-dependent Nintendo.
BY THE NUMBERS: Nintendo is forecasting a 7.5 percent rise in net profit to 300 billion yen ($3.3 billion) for the fiscal year through March 2010 from the previous fiscal year, on 1.8 trillion yen ($19.6) revenue, down 2.1 percent on-year.
The Kyoto-based manufacturer expects to sell 26 million Wii machines and 30 million DS machines in the 12 months through March 2010. The Wii is still the top-selling home console, having sold nearly 53 million globally since its 2006 introduction.
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters, on average, expect fiscal year profit of 279 billion yen ($3 billion), about the same as the record profit in the previous fiscal year.
ANALYST TAKE: Yusuke Tsunoda, analyst with Tokai Tokyo Securities,…
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