Nintendo reported a 66 per cent fall in quarterly operating profit on slowing demand for its Wii videogame console and a stronger yen, and stuck to its full-year forecast for a decline of 12 per cent.
Nintendo has weathered the economic downturn relatively well thanks to the popularity of the Wii and its DS handheld player, which have catapulted it to the top of the global game market ahead of Sony and Microsoft.
But Nintendo expects its profit to fall for the first time in four years in the current year to March 2010 as the Wii's momentum slows and the company faces increased competition in the handheld business from Apple's iPhone.
It has also been hurt by a stronger yen, which eats into earnings generated overseas.
The company said today its operating profit came to 40.4 billion yen ($426 million) in April-June, against a 119.2 billion yen profit in the same quarter a year earlier and a consensus estimate of 74.5 billion yen from the average forecast of three analysts polled by Thomson Reuters.
Nintendo reiterated its forecast for operating profit to fall to 490 billion yen in the full year to next March, against the market consensus for 514 billion yen.
It also reiterated its full-year forecast for Wii console sales of 26 million and the DS of 30 million.
Analysts expect demand for the Wii to get a boost later in the year with Nintendo scheduled to launch major titles for the holiday shopping season.
Nintendo shares closed up 2.6 per cent at 26,810 yen ahead of the earnings announcement, compared with a 0.5 per cent gain in the benchmark Nikkei average.
Shares of Nintendo are down 21 per cent since the start of the year, underperforming the Nikkei's rise of about 15 per cent.
Reuters