(The item "2nd UPDATE:Sony PS2 Price Cut Signals PS3 Price Cut: Analysts," published Tuesday at 1:19 p.m. EDT, incorrectly said the PlayStation 2 was eight years old. The corrected version follows.)

 
   DOW JONES NEWSWIRES 
 

Now that it's in a price-cutting mood, analysts tracking Sony Corp. (SNE) say the company is more likely than ever before to lower the price of its flagship PlayStation 3 videogame system sometime this year.

Sony's computer entertainment division announced Tuesday it will lower the price of its PlayStation 2 console to $99.99. The PS2 was released in 2000. Sony hopes the 23% price cut, which takes effect Wednesday, will sustain the life of the PS2, which it says has sold more than 136 million units worldwide since its launch.

Critics contend Sony now needs to lower its PS3 prices for a number of reasons, starting with staying competitive with Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), which saw sales of its Xbox 360 jump after lowering the price and bundling the system with games in early September.

PS3 price-cut pressure increased in December, when analysts said Sony might not reach its goal of selling 10 million PS3 consoles through March without a price reduction, as sales for the hardware dropped despite gains by competitors. March videogame console sales results won't be available for another two weeks, a Sony spokesman said.

Meanwhile, the company is in the midst of a major restructuring - shedding 16,000 jobs worldwide - in an effort to reverse its fortunes. Sony expects to post a net loss for the fiscal year ending in March, its first net loss in 14 years.

That's not to say a move on PS3 prices couldn't backfire. Sony is still losing money on every PS3 it sells at $399, so a price cut could hurt the games division, analysts say. Yet BMO Capital Markets analyst Edward Williams was among the handful that suggested Tuesday Sony will cut the price of the PS3 by $100 sometime before the start of the 2009 holiday shopping season.

"In our view, this action would have a much greater impact on the interactive entertainment ecosystem than will the PS2 price cut," he noted.

A Sony spokesman didn't comment on the potential for a price cut.

Any PS3 cut would highlight how Sony's strategy of selling the PS3 as a relatively inexpensive Blu-ray player has failed. That's largely because prices of Blu-ray players, which play high-definition videos, have fallen so sharply recently that it's now possible to buy a Blu-ray player and an Xbox 360 for less than a PS3.

In the interim, the new PS2 prices Sony announced Tuesday should resonate with consumers facing a challenging economic environment, despite the relatively limited number of video games still available for the console, said BMO Capital Markets analyst Edward Williams. Sony, and leading PS2-compatible game publishers Activision-Blizzard Inc. (ATVI) and Electronic Arts Inc. (ERTS) should also see a benefit, he said.

Used videogame retailer GameStop Corp. (GME) also stands to gain because value-seeking shoppers that frequent used-goods retailers are more likely to buy $99 PS2s, according to Sterne Agee analyst Arvind Bhatia.

-By Kerry E. Grace, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5089; kerry.grace@dowjones.com

(Ben Charny contributed to this report.)