Japan's Hitachi looks to future after wobbly year

  • Police probes DAP life adviser for ‘Malaysian Spring’ statement
    Police probes DAP life adviser for ‘Malaysian Spring’ statement

    KUALA LUMPUR, May 22 – Police have opened an investigation on DAP National Chairman Dr Chen Man Hin for allegedly conspiring to create public disorder when he used the term “Malaysian Spring” in a private email correspondence, party stalwart Lim Kit Siang revealed today.

  • Keep PPSMI to upgrade Malaysia’s talent pool, say industry players
    Keep PPSMI to upgrade Malaysia’s talent pool, say industry players

    KUALA LUMPUR, May 22 – A group of American manufacturers in Malaysia told Putrajaya today to keep the teaching of science and mathematics in English (PPSMI) as a way of strengthening the nation’s talent pool.

  • Gerakan pleads for BN to open up direct membership
    Gerakan pleads for BN to open up direct membership

    KUALA LUMPUR, May 22 ― Barisan Nasional (BN) must consider letting people join directly and without regard to ethnicity if the coalition wished to survive future elections, Gerakan said today, cautioning that young voters were increasingly turned off by the race-based parties.

  • Penang Umno Youth No 2 denies involvement in fracas
    Penang Umno Youth No 2 denies involvement in fracas

    Penang Umno Youth deputy chief Norman Zahalan today denied ever being involved in the thuggery during Monday's candlelight vigil to demand the release of student Adam Adli Abdul Halim.

  • 'GST will burden every M'sian by RM1,000 a year'
    'GST will burden every M'sian by RM1,000 a year'

    Every Malaysian will be burdened by an extra RM 1,000 a year should the government impose a seven percent Goods and Services Tax (GST) rate, Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng has said.

Japanese high-tech firm Hitachi said Thursday its operating profit fell in the year to March due to the earthquake and tsunami disaster at home and Thai floods, but it expected growth this year.

Hitachi said its group operating profit fell 7.3 percent from a year earlier to 412.28 billion yen ($5.17 billion) in the last fiscal year, blaming lower revenue from digital devices, the March 2011 disaster and floods in Thailand.

Profits also took a beating due to additional costs for its overseas power generation business, it said. Total revenue rose 3.8 percent to 9.67 trillion yen.

Net profit shot up 45.3 percent to 347.18 billion yen, hitting a record high for the second consecutive year.

The sharp rise stemmed largely from one-time gains from the sale of its hard disk drive business.

Hitachi, whose products range from microchips to railways, has been shifting its business focus to large-scale infrastructure projects.

Its results contrast sharply with heavy losses at many Japanese consumer electronics firms, hurt by the impact of the strong yen and punishing price competition in flat-panel televisions.

Hitachi expects its operating profit to rise 16.4 percent to 480 billion yen in the current year to March 2013, despite a 5.9 percent drop in revenue to 9.1 trillion yen. It forecast net profit to fall 42.4 percent to 200 billion yen.

-- Dow Jones Newswires contributed to this article --

Loading...

Comments on Yahoo! pages are subject to our link to Comments Guidelines. You are responsible for any content that you post. Yahoo! is not responsible or liable in any way for comments posted by its users. Yahoo! does not in any way endorse or support comments made by its users.