2nd UPDATE: Hitachi President "Concerned" About Delays In Sale Of Hard Disk Drive Operations
20 December 2011 - 5:17PM
Dow Jones News
TOKYO (Dow Jones)--The president of Hitachi Ltd. (6501.TO) said
Tuesday he is "very concerned" about possible further delays in the
planned sale of its hard disk drive business to Western Digital
Corp. (WDC) beyond March, as the U.S. company has yet to gain
approval from various international regulators.
"Authorities are continuing to examine the deal, and it's not
clear what China will say," Hitachi President Hiroaki Nakanishi
told reporters at company headquarters in Tokyo.
The concerns over further delays in the deal come on top of
other uncertainties for Hitachi's outlook from the yen's strength
and Europe's continuing fiscal problems.
"There are many uncertain factors," Nakanishi said, noting that
Europe's problems affect not only local demand but also investments
by European companies in Asia and elsewhere. The possibility of a
slowdown in China's growth is also a concern.
The Japanese electronics maker said in March it had agreed to
sell its hard disk drive business to Western Digital for $4.3
billion and planned to complete the deal by the end of this year.
But earlier this month Hitachi said it expected the sale to be
finalized by March 2012.
A delay beyond March would have a significant impact on
Hitachi's cash flow forecasts for the current fiscal year, which
currently factor in the expected proceeds of the sale, Nakanishi
said.
Nakanishi didn't say how likely such delays might be.
Apart from concerns about the Western Digital deal, Hitachi,
like many other Japanese technology firms, has been struggling to
cope with the strong yen and weakening European demand.
For the second half of this fiscal year through March, Hitachi's
earnings forecasts are based on the assumption the dollar will
average Y75 and the euro Y105.
"A yen stronger than those levels would be troubling for us,"
said Nakanishi.
The yen's strength against the dollar has a bigger impact on
Hitachi than its strength against the euro, and the company has
been trying to increase purchases in dollars to offset the effect,
he said.
Europe's economic situation is hurting demand for electronic
parts in the region, while there are also concerns about
governments becoming more cautious about spending on public
infrastructure projects, Nakanishi said.
Still, Hitachi's high-speed railway project in the U.K. has so
far been unaffected by Europe's economic conditions, Nakanishi
said. Talks on the project's financial terms have continued since
the U.K. government said in March it planned to proceed with a
Hitachi consortium proposal.
Hitachi's nuclear plant business has been facing difficulties in
Japan since the start of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster
triggered by the March 11 natural disaster.
But Nakanishi said overseas demand for Japan's nuclear plant
technology remains solid.
In July, Hitachi was selected as a preferred bidder for a
nuclear power plant project in Lithuania. Nakanishi said the
company expects to reach a concession agreement in mid-February and
sign a final agreement next summer.
Hitachi, one of Japan's biggest companies, had Y9.316 trillion
in revenue in the last fiscal year ended in March. It has been
restructuring by distancing itself from volatile businesses such as
electronic devices, focusing more on technology services and
infrastructure projects that target corporate and government
clients rather than consumers.
Nakanishi said that the restructuring won't finish with the sale
of the hard disk drive business, and that Hitachi will continue to
review its business portfolio. "The environment is always changing,
so we have to continue to adapt," he said.
-By Juro Osawa, Dow Jones Newswires; 813 6269 2794;
juro.osawa@dowjones.com
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