Earnings

Sony raises guidance on gaming strength, quarterly operating profit beats estimates

Products You May Like

In this article

Sony’s PlayStation 5.
Thiago Prudencio | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Sony raised sales guidance for the full year Thursday and posted operating profit that smashed analyst expectations after a strong quarter for its gaming business.

Here’s how the company did in the September quarter, versus LSEG consensus estimates:

  • Revenue: 2.97 trillion Japanese yen ($19.4 billion), versus 3.03 trillion yen expected. That was up 9% and slightly below analyst expectations.
  • Operating profit: 445.1 billion yen ($2.91 billion), versus 336.07 billion yen expected. That’s up 69% year-over-year and beats expectations.

The Japanese tech giant revised its fiscal year 2025 revenue target up slightly to 12.7 trillion yen. It previously targeted 12.6 billion yen of sales. Sony also expects full-year operating profit of 1.3 trillion yen, in line with its previous forecast.

That came as Sony saw strength in its game and network services division, which houses its popular PlayStation home console brand. Game and network services revenue at the company came in at 1 trillion yen, up 11% year-over-year.

Sony’s gaming division has held up well thanks to a shift to digital game purchases and the PlayStation Plus subscription service. However, hardware shipments have proven lackluster amid a weak console market beset by a lack of hyped up triple-A games.

Analysts expect things to improve next year for the gaming sector, though — not least thanks to the anticipated launch of a next-generation Nintendo Switch model and the release of Grand Theft Auto VI.

This is a breaking news story. Please refresh for updates.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Dozens of retailers jacked up interest rates on store cards ahead of Fed cuts
Crypto investor pays $6 million for a banana — and plans to eat it
Wall Street analysts tout our 2 cybersecurity stocks ahead of quarterly earnings
New York City FC, Etihad Airways agree to 20-year naming rights deal for new MLS stadium
Number of older adults who lost $100,000 or more to fraud has tripled since 2020, FTC says

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *