Sony Corporation (SNE)
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Sir Howard Stringer, Director/CEO/Other Corporate Officer
1-7-1 KONAN
Minato-Ku
Tokyo, 108-0075
JP
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Phone: 81367482111
Fax: 81354482244
Latest news from Portfolio
-
Bombs Away?Jun 20 2008
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S.W.F. Seeks Chrysler BuildingJun 11 2008
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Multiplex MarketingJun 06 2008
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Life with LaptopMay 13 2008
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Skip an Ad? Not if You Picked It.May 06 2008
Portfolio.com Overview
WHERE THEY CAME FROM
In the spirit of rebuilding postwar Japan with engineering know-how, Sony was founded in 1946 as Tokyo Telecommunications Engineering. In the early 1950s, it launched an era of consumer electronics development in Japan when it licensed transistor technology from Western Electric, AT&T’s former manufacturing arm. In 1958 the company gave itself a less unwieldy name: an amalgam of the Latin sonus, meaning “sound,” and the English sonny.
WHAT THEY DO
Sony designs and manufactures the Cybershot camera, the PlayStation game console, and Memory Sticks, which are mini-USB drives that allow digital files to be carried with spylike stealth. The Tokyo-based company has a knack for combining technological innovation with savvy marketing.
But Sony doesn’t just excel at making hardware. In the late 1980s the company began to aggressively acquire interests in the entertainment industries its products support. Sony Pictures Entertainment has since released many blockbusters, including the 2006 James Bond smash Casino Royale (in collaboration with MGM Studios); the division produces television hits such as Jeopardy and Days of Our Lives. Sony BMG Music Entertainment owns 21 record labels, whose rosters include such artists as Alicia Keys and Barry Manilow.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
Sony’s Walkman was the iPod of its day. Introduced in 1979, the portable cassette player was the first device that let people listen to music whenever, wherever.
Sony came late to the videogame industry but caught up fast. Soon after PlayStation debuted in 1995, it bumped Nintendo from the No. 1 position, and more than 100 million units of its original console have since been sold. Each version of PlayStation has enticed consumers with supplemental home-entertainment features: The original played CDs, the second generation read DVDs, and the third contains a drive for Blu-ray discs, a high-definition DVD format seen as a possible replacement for DVDs. And despite manufacturing and supply problems with the launch of the PlayStation 3, Sony remains at the top of this industry.
Sony’s involvement in the development of the DVD was more a successful compromise than an outright success. In the early 1990s, while Sony and Philips were creating a form of compressed optical-disc storage known as the multimedia compact disc, or MMCD, Toshiba and others were working on its competition, the super density, or SD, disc. Afraid their product would be trounced as Sony’s Betamax was by VHS in the 1980s, Sony and Philips decided to back an SD disc that incorporated MMCD technology. The resulting product, the DVD, hit the market in 1996.
WHAT THEY GOT WRONG
In 1975, Sony introduced Betamax videocassettes and VCRs. But unlike Sony’s competitor JVC, which licensed its VHS technology to manufacturers, Sony insisted on keeping its technology proprietary, and the Betamax format tanked.
In 2006, Dell recalled 4.1 million laptop computers containing Sony-made batteries with defects that could cause the batteries to overheat and catch fire. Less than two weeks later, Apple recalled an additional 1.8 million Sony batteries. Although the recalls didn’t have a huge impact on Sony’s stock price, they did cost the company an estimated $420 million.
The release of Sony’s PlayStation 3 was criticized as a debacle. Scheduled to debut in spring 2006, the much-hyped new system didn’t hit shelves until November, and a shortage of components caused Sony to reduce its shipment targets. Nintendo, a major videogame rival, profited by introducing its new Wii console in November, selling twice as many of them as Sony did PlayStations that month.
WHAT’S NEXT
Sony has lost its edge, and
Howard Stringer is determined to regain it.
Stringer, who in June 2005 became the first non-Japanese chairman and C.E.O. of Sony, has planned plant closures, job cuts, and the breaking down of barriers between Sony’s divisions to reenergize the company.
The long-term successes of PlayStation 3 and Blu-ray technology, which is competing for market dominance with Toshiba’s HD DVD, are likely to be used as gauges of Stringer’s achievement. Perhaps Sony live up to its motto and be “like no other” again. —Callen Bair
In the spirit of rebuilding postwar Japan with engineering know-how, Sony was founded in 1946 as Tokyo Telecommunications Engineering. In the early 1950s, it launched an era of consumer electronics development in Japan when it licensed transistor technology from Western Electric, AT&T’s former manufacturing arm. In 1958 the company gave itself a less unwieldy name: an amalgam of the Latin sonus, meaning “sound,” and the English sonny.
WHAT THEY DO
Sony designs and manufactures the Cybershot camera, the PlayStation game console, and Memory Sticks, which are mini-USB drives that allow digital files to be carried with spylike stealth. The Tokyo-based company has a knack for combining technological innovation with savvy marketing.
But Sony doesn’t just excel at making hardware. In the late 1980s the company began to aggressively acquire interests in the entertainment industries its products support. Sony Pictures Entertainment has since released many blockbusters, including the 2006 James Bond smash Casino Royale (in collaboration with MGM Studios); the division produces television hits such as Jeopardy and Days of Our Lives. Sony BMG Music Entertainment owns 21 record labels, whose rosters include such artists as Alicia Keys and Barry Manilow.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
Sony’s Walkman was the iPod of its day. Introduced in 1979, the portable cassette player was the first device that let people listen to music whenever, wherever.
Sony came late to the videogame industry but caught up fast. Soon after PlayStation debuted in 1995, it bumped Nintendo from the No. 1 position, and more than 100 million units of its original console have since been sold. Each version of PlayStation has enticed consumers with supplemental home-entertainment features: The original played CDs, the second generation read DVDs, and the third contains a drive for Blu-ray discs, a high-definition DVD format seen as a possible replacement for DVDs. And despite manufacturing and supply problems with the launch of the PlayStation 3, Sony remains at the top of this industry.
Sony’s involvement in the development of the DVD was more a successful compromise than an outright success. In the early 1990s, while Sony and Philips were creating a form of compressed optical-disc storage known as the multimedia compact disc, or MMCD, Toshiba and others were working on its competition, the super density, or SD, disc. Afraid their product would be trounced as Sony’s Betamax was by VHS in the 1980s, Sony and Philips decided to back an SD disc that incorporated MMCD technology. The resulting product, the DVD, hit the market in 1996.
WHAT THEY GOT WRONG
In 1975, Sony introduced Betamax videocassettes and VCRs. But unlike Sony’s competitor JVC, which licensed its VHS technology to manufacturers, Sony insisted on keeping its technology proprietary, and the Betamax format tanked.
In 2006, Dell recalled 4.1 million laptop computers containing Sony-made batteries with defects that could cause the batteries to overheat and catch fire. Less than two weeks later, Apple recalled an additional 1.8 million Sony batteries. Although the recalls didn’t have a huge impact on Sony’s stock price, they did cost the company an estimated $420 million.
The release of Sony’s PlayStation 3 was criticized as a debacle. Scheduled to debut in spring 2006, the much-hyped new system didn’t hit shelves until November, and a shortage of components caused Sony to reduce its shipment targets. Nintendo, a major videogame rival, profited by introducing its new Wii console in November, selling twice as many of them as Sony did PlayStations that month.
WHAT’S NEXT
Sony has lost its edge, and
Stringer, who in June 2005 became the first non-Japanese chairman and C.E.O. of Sony, has planned plant closures, job cuts, and the breaking down of barriers between Sony’s divisions to reenergize the company.
The long-term successes of PlayStation 3 and Blu-ray technology, which is competing for market dominance with Toshiba’s HD DVD, are likely to be used as gauges of Stringer’s achievement. Perhaps Sony live up to its motto and be “like no other” again. —Callen Bair
Portfolio Articles
-
Bombs Away?
Hollywood's summer of malcontents pits Get Smart against The Love Guru for box office bucks.Jun 20 2008 -
S.W.F. Seeks Chrysler Building
But is Manhattan ready for Abu Dhabi Deco?Jun 11 2008 -
Multiplex Marketing
It's summertime, and the movie-product tie-ins are flourishing. Is it really worth all the fuss for advertisers? You bet.
Jun 06 2008 -
Life with Laptop
It's your constant travel companion, a source of pain and pleasure. Here's how to make living with your portable computer easier on both of you.
May 13 2008 -
Skip an Ad? Not if You Picked It.
Ads created and selected by viewers is a Web phenomenon. Can it translate to older media?May 06 2008
News Feeds
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Sony opens up e-book Reader to other booksellers
AP
Jul 24 2008
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Electronics giants to create wireless HD standard
AP
Jul 23 2008
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'Dark Knight' finishes with record $158.4 million
AP
Jul 21 2008
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Analysis finds TV buyers steered to costlier LCDs
AP
Jul 21 2008
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Nintendo, Microsoft stumble while Sony cruises
AP
Jul 21 2008
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Video game sales soar 53 percent in June
AP
Jul 17 2008
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Big 3 mimic each other at E3: more, more and more
AP
Jul 17 2008
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Microsoft cuts Xbox price by $50, plans 60GB model
AP
Jul 13 2008
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At mountain mogul retreat, talk turns to economy
AP
Jul 11 2008
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EU court: Rehear Sony BMG case
AP
Jul 10 2008
Portfolio Blogs
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Sony's New Games Man
May 16 2008
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I Love Minisodes!
Mar 02 2008
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Sony's OLED at CES
Jan 08 2008
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Lenovo's Consumer PCs
Jan 03 2008
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Maybe Blu-ray vs. HD DVD Is The Wrong War
Nov 09 2007
Press Releases
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Sony Signs Worldwide Endorsement Contract With Kaka Jul-23-2008, 05:10AM EDT
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Sony Signs Worldwide Endorsement Contract With KakAAi Jul-23-2008, 03:05AM EDT
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DC Universe(TM) Online Unveiled by Sony Online Entertainment to the Masses at Comic-Con Jul-22-2008, 03:26PM EDT
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Consortium Established to Develop and Promote Close Proximity Wireless Technology 'TransferJet' Jul-17-2008, 12:30AM EDT
News From Around the Web
News
-
Watch your house
(The Sunday Business Post, Ireland)Jul 26 2008 -
Wireless standard will cut the cables on hi-def video
(New Zealand Herald)Jul 26 2008 -
At E3, Game Companies Play Copycat
(Sci-Tech Today)Jul 26 2008 -
Sony Turns the Page on E-Book Business Model
(E-Commerce Times)Jul 26 2008 -
Starship Troopers (Blu-ray) This movie always cracks me up! It is pure Verheoven; excess, excess, excess.
(Home Theater Magazine)Jul 26 2008 -
Sony responds to WipEout epilepsy test issues
(Ars Technica)Jul 26 2008 -
Laptops: In Search of Bearable Lightness
(PC World)Jul 26 2008 -
Sony opens up eBook Reader
(PC Pro)Jul 26 2008 -
Microsoft to distribute films on Xbox Live; Sony studies options for Play Station Network
(Channel 8 Dallas (WFAA))Jul 26 2008
Blogs
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Amazon To Power Upcoming MySpace Music Downloads
(TechCrunch)Jul 26 2008 -
Jul 26 2008
-
Jul 26 2008
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Sony HDR-CX12 has arrived
(CamcorderInfo.com Blog)Jul 25 2008 -
David Reeves promises an announcement filled Leipzig
(PS3 Fanboy)Jul 25 2008
Employees
Number of Employees: 180,500
Revenue per Employee: $456,178
Top Executives
Ryoji Chubachi, Director/President/Other Corporate Officer/CEO, Divisional
Keiji Kimura, Executive VP, Divisional/Other Corporate Officer
Nobuyuki Oneda, CFO/Executive VP
Katsumi Ihara, Director/Other Corporate Officer
Nicole Seligman, Executive VP/General Counsel
Yutaka Nakagawa, Other Corporate Officer
Board of Directors
Tsun-Yan Hsieh, Director
Yotaro Kobayahsi, Chairman of the Board/Director
Sakie T. Fukushima, Director
Yoshiaki Yamauchi, Director
Sir Peter Leahy Bonfield, Director
Ryoji Chubachi, Director/President/Other Corporate Officer/CEO, Divisional
Financials
Quarterly
Annual
| Income Statement | 06/2008 | 02/2008 | 10/2007 | 08/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | 19.53 Bil. | 17.3 Bil. | 11.46 Bil. | 9.22 Bil. |
| Gross Operating Profit | 8.49 Bil. | 7.78 Bil. | 6.65 Bil. | 6.84 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 2.89 Bil. | 3.38 Bil. | 1.99 Bil. | 3.57 Bil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 919 Mil. | 2.98 Bil. | 1.01 Bil. | 2.1 Bil. |
| Total Net Income | 708 Mil. | 1.76 Bil. | 641 Mil. | 540 Mil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 0.7 | 1.75 | 0.64 | 0.54 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 0.67 | 1.67 | 0.61 | 0.51 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 06/2008 | 02/2008 | 10/2007 | 08/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | 10.86 Bil. | 8.98 Bil. | 5.45 Bil. | 3.66 Bil. |
| Total Assets | 50.1 Bil. | 48.73 Bil. | 43.43 Bil. | 35.15 Bil. |
| Total Liabilities | 40.23 Bil. | 39.29 Bil. | 34.58 Bil. | 27.53 Bil. |
| Total Capitalization | 41.94 Bil. | 38.95 Bil. | 39.34 Bil. | 37.15 Bil. |
| Cash Flow | 06/2008 | 02/2008 | 10/2007 | 08/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | 7.58 Bil. | 2.97 Bil. | -600 Mil. | -764 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | -9.1 Bil. | -4.7 Bil. | -4.77 Bil. | -3.25 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | 5.06 Bil. | 3.75 Bil. | 3.89 Bil. | 1.07 Bil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | 2.87 Bil. | 1.96 Bil. | -1.5 Bil. | -2.84 Bil. |
| Income Statement | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | 60.87 Bil. | 43.47 Bil. | 38.08 Bil. | 40.67 Bil. |
| Gross Operating Profit | 27.85 Bil. | 26.94 Bil. | 25.42 Bil. | 26.24 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 10.7 Bil. | 7.18 Bil. | 7.93 Bil. | 7.38 Bil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 5.9 Bil. | 1.77 Bil. | 2.79 Bil. | 1.97 Bil. |
| Total Net Income | 3.69 Bil. | 1.07 Bil. | 1.05 Bil. | 1.53 Bil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 3.68 | 1.07 | 1.04 | 1.64 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 3.51 | 1.02 | 0.99 | 1.48 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | 10.86 Bil. | 6.79 Bil. | 5.97 Bil. | 7.27 Bil. |
| Total Assets | 50.1 Bil. | 38.59 Bil. | 32.02 Bil. | 33.18 Bil. |
| Total Liabilities | 40.23 Bil. | 30.15 Bil. | 27.19 Bil. | 26.21 Bil. |
| Total Capitalization | 41.94 Bil. | 37.11 Bil. | 33.72 Bil. | 33.12 Bil. |
| Cash Flow | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | 7.58 Bil. | 4.76 Bil. | 3.4 Bil. | 6.04 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | -9.1 Bil. | -6.07 Bil. | -7.4 Bil. | -8.69 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | 5.06 Bil. | 2.1 Bil. | 3.06 Bil. | 1.91 Bil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | 2.87 Bil. | 822 Mil. | -646 Mil. | -654 Mil. |
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