Toshiba Corp. is considering spinning off its key flash-memory
business as part of efforts to make up for expected losses in its U.S.
nuclear unit, a source familiar with the plan said Tuesday.
Toshiba’s advanced NAND-type flash memory, which is used for devices
such as smartphones, has a leading share of the global market with one
financial institution estimating its total value at ¥2 trillion (about
$17.7 billion).
Outside investments worth hundreds of billions of yen would absorb
the loss at the U.S. nuclear business. Toshiba will keep a more than 50
percent stake in the spun-off unit, the source said.
Western Digital Corp. of the United States has invested in the
production of flash memory and Toshiba will maintain the alliance even
after it spins off the business, the source said.
Toshiba, which is struggling to emerge from an accounting fraud
scandal, said last month it is facing a multibillion-dollar write-down
at its U.S. nuclear division Westinghouse Electric Co.
The company will make a final decision about the spinning off of its
flash-memory business after determining the total loss as soon as the
end of this month, according to the source.
It would have to be relegated to the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s second
section from the first section should it slip into negative net worth
for the fiscal year ending March 31, hampering Toshiba’s efforts to get
back on its feet.
Toshiba has been focusing on nuclear power operations but has been
struggling to win orders for new power plants both at home and abroad,
particularly after the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster. The company
booked an impairment loss of about ¥250 billion in the U.S. nuclear
business in the last fiscal year.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/01/18/business/corporate-business/toshiba-eyes-spinning-off-flash-memory-business/#.WH_AMH2vKiw
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