Is Sony buying time — or problems?

Updated 05 October 2012
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Is Sony buying time — or problems?

TOKYO: Sony Corp. CEO Kazuo Hirai has spent $1.8 billion in the past three months snapping up an assortment of businesses such as medical equipment and cloud gaming, leaving investors to worry he is blowing his firm’s waning finances on a muddled plan to revive the fading giant.
Hirai, a Sony veteran of nearly three decades, took over the top spot in April pledging to reshape the once-stellar brand around the pillars of gaming, digital imaging and mobile devices. Since his promotion, the company’s stock market value has fallen by around $8 billion.
After a decade of losing money on TVs, and four consecutive net loss-making years squeezed in the competitive vice of Apple Inc. and South Korea’s Samsung Electronics, Sony is running out of time and money.
“There are signs of change, but it’s only a start,” said Tetsuro Ii, CEO of Commons Asset Management.
“From what we have seen so far his strategy appears fractured and the investments aren’t going to be profit drivers. He should probably give a clearer explanation of his new Sony. The only way Sony is going to improve its finances is to earn.”
Anguish over the demise of Japan’s electronics giants has for the past two months focused on TV pioneer Sharp Corp. That eased on Friday when banks agreed a $4.6 billion bailout, averting the immediate danger of a liquidity crunch.
While still a long way from being the next Sharp, Sony has seen its five-year credit default swaps — the cost of insuring its debt — double to more than 400 basis points since Hirai took charge.
Analysts, meanwhile, view its profit outlook as overly optimistic and its finances are eroding as its credit rating edges closer to junk amid the splurge of acquisitions.
In its most recent buy, announced the same day as Sharp’s bailout deal, Sony agreed to pay $643 million for a 10 percent stake in scandal-tainted camera and endoscope maker Olympus Corp.
The tie-up, which made Sony Olympus’s largest shareholder and will see the two firms establish a company to develop medical equipment, offers Sony another path away from loss-making TVs.
But it is a further drain its stretched finances for an investment that in eight years time will add only $1 billion in sales to a $90 billion-a-year company.
Touring the CEATEC consumer electronics show, near Tokyo, on Tuesday, Hirai defended the investment.
“As we do these acquisitions we are very mindful of our cash position,” Hirai said, after showing Panasonic Corp’s boss, Kazuhiro Tsuga, ultra high-definition televisions lined up at Sony’s booth.
“We have done a lot in terms of realigning our portfolio over the last six months,” he added.
Last month, Hirai agreed to pay $771 million for the 42 percent Sony did not already own in medical information website operator So-net Entertainment.
A month earlier, he said his company would buy California-based Gaikai Inc. for $380 million to help establish an internet-based “cloud” gaming service.
Yet problems loom in its console business that threaten to kick out one of the key pillars of Hirai’s revival plan. Sony in August trimmed its annual forecast for handheld Vita and PSP consoles to 12 million, from 16 million.
It also cut its annual operating profit forecast to 130 billion yen ($1.7 billion) from 180 billion yen. The average estimate of 14 analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters is for 110 billion yen, suggesting another cut before the business year concludes.
Speaking at the same venue as Hirai during the Tokyo Game Show less than two weeks earlier, Yoshikazu Tanaka, the founder of social gaming firm, Gree Inc., the latest poster child for Japan tech, predicted the death of game consoles.
They would, he said, be victims of a conversion trend that has already melded mobile phones and PCs into tablets and smartphones and which will eventually absorb game machines.
“Within a few years the power of tablets and smartphones will exceed that of current game consoles,” Tanaka said in a speech at the event.
Hirai has said his strategy for Sony, an emblem of both Japan’s post-war rebirth and its post-bubble demise, is aimed at “putting a smile back on customers faces”. Neither customers nor investors appear to be smiling just yet.
“Sony and Sharp have the same problem: lost power to innovate to Apple and the Koreans; high overheads; no new products,” said Donald van Deventer, the CEO of Kamakura Corporation, a company that provides risk management research.
Kamakura estimates Sony’s one-year probability of default at 1.53 percent. “We generally consider anything above 1 percent as somewhat risky,” van Deventer said.
At the end of June its shareholder equity ratio, a key indicator of its financial standing had dipped below 15 percent, when a rate of 20 percent is considered the healthy minimum.
For comparison, Panasonic at the end of June boasted a ratio of 29 percent.
Making Hirai’s task harder, borrowing to help pay for Sony’s turnaround became more expensive on Sept. 25, when, citing persistent weakness in consumer electronics, Standard & Poor’s cut its long-term debt rating to two rungs above junk. Rival ratings agency Moody’s is set to deliver its judgment on Sony by November.
For now, Hirai is resorting to asset sales. “We have sold off some of our assets as well to generate cash and so it’s just a matter of making sure we keep that balance,” the Sony boss said at the electronics show.
That book-balancing precipitated the sale its chemical business, completed on Friday, to a state-owned Japanese bank for 57 billion yen ($730.4 million). It may also include its New York headquarters, the 37-storey Sony Tower.
Hirai at CEATEC summed up his job at the top so far as a “whirlwind” of overseas trips to spread the message of Sony’s revival. But as uncertainty wafts over his company, Hirai knows he will be judged on what he does rather than what he says.
“We obviously need to do a lot more and as I have always said we need to show results as well,” he said.


Arab food and beverage sector draws $22bn in foreign investment over 2 decades: Dhaman 

Updated 28 December 2025
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Arab food and beverage sector draws $22bn in foreign investment over 2 decades: Dhaman 

JEDDAH: Foreign investors committed about $22 billion to the Arab region’s food and beverage sector over the past two decades, backing 516 projects that generated roughly 93,000 jobs, according to a new sectoral report. 

In its third food and beverage industry study for 2025, the Arab Investment and Export Credit Guarantee Corp., known as Dhaman, said the bulk of investment flowed to a handful of markets. Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Morocco and Qatar attracted 421 projects — about 82 percent of the total — with capital expenditure exceeding $17 billion, or nearly four-fifths of overall investment. 

Projects in those five countries accounted for around 71,000 jobs, representing 76 percent of total employment created by foreign direct investment in the sector over the 2003–2024 period, the report said, according to figures carried by the Kuwait News Agency. 

“The US has been the region's top food and beverage investor over the past 22 years with 74 projects or 14 projects of the total, and Capex of approximately $4 billion or 18 percent of the total, creating more than 14,000 jobs,” KUNA reported. 

Investment was also concentrated among a small group of multinational players. The sector’s top 10 foreign investors accounted for roughly 15 percent of projects, 32 percent of capital expenditure and 29 percent of newly created jobs.  

Swiss food group Nestlé led in project count with 14 initiatives, while Ukrainian agribusiness firm NIBULON topped capital spending and job creation, investing $2 billion and generating around 6,000 jobs. 

At the inter-Arab investment level, the report noted that 12 Arab countries invested in 108 projects, accounting for about 21 percent of total FDI projects in the sector over the past 22 years. These initiatives, carried out by 65 companies, involved $6.5 billion in capital expenditure, representing 30 percent of total FDI, and generated nearly 28,000 jobs. 

The UAE led inter-Arab investments, accounting for 45 percent of total projects and 58 percent of total capital expenditure, the report added, according to KUNA. 

The report also noted that the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Qatar topped the Arab ranking as the most attractive countries for investment in the sector in 2024, followed by Oman, Bahrain, Algeria, Morocco, and Kuwait. 

Looking ahead, Dhaman expects consumer demand to continue rising. Food and non-alcoholic beverage sales across 16 Arab countries are projected to increase 8.6 percent to more than $430 billion by the end of 2025, equivalent to 4.2 percent of global sales, before exceeding $560 billion by 2029. 

Sales are expected to remain highly concentrated geographically, with Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, the UAE and Iraq accounting for about 77 percent of the regional total. By product category, meat and poultry are forecast to lead with sales of about $106 billion, followed by cereals, pasta and baked goods at roughly $63 billion. 

Average annual per capita spending on food and non-alcoholic beverages in the region is projected to rise 7.2 percent to more than $1,845 by the end of 2025, approaching the global average, and to reach about $2,255 by 2029. Household spending on these products is expected to represent 25.8 percent of total expenditure in 13 Arab countries, above the global average of 24.2 percent. 

Arab external trade in food and beverages grew more than 15 percent in 2024 to $195 billion, with exports rising 18 percent to $56 billion and imports increasing 14 percent to $139 billion. Brazil was the largest foreign supplier to the region, exporting $16.5 billion worth of products, while Saudi Arabia ranked as the top Arab exporter at $6.6 billion.