Do you know any good links to look into deferred taxes in general? It's one part of finance I haven't really looked into.Joey Fox said:Keep in mind that just because a company has an operating profit doesn't mean they are healthy. If you have bad Net Incomes but good operating profits you could be looking at a change in ownership at some point. Most of all, and the reason I wrote this post, is that losing deferred tax assets is not in any way shape or form a good thing. Investors would sell the stock based off of that fact alone.
surly said:I know the difference between revenue and profit. One is pretty meaningless when the other is a negative number.
Coincidentally, Nokia's Market Cap is 29.9B! Breaking News: Microsoft to buy Sony. Someone send it in.teruterubozu said:They have a current market cap value of 26.32 billion. Please, enough amateur financial doomsayers.
teruterubozu said:They have a current market cap value of 26.32 billion. Please, enough amateur financial doomsayers.
What's your take on Joey Fox's post? Relevant or doomsayer-esque?teruterubozu said:They have a current market cap value of 26.32 billion. Please, enough amateur financial doomsayers.
Celine said:No, it's unlikely.
But they can make you "redundant".
They have lost almost a billion dollars in market cap in a day, 10 billion in the last 3 months. That is significant. Things can be turned around but they are in a scary position and can't afford anymore bad luckteruterubozu said:They have a current market cap value of 26.32 billion. Please, enough amateur financial doomsayers.
Sony are not about to post annual profits of 289 million, hence the thread title.staticneuron said:Sorry, the way you responded made it seem like you didn't understand the infographic.
Revenue: 77.5 million
Profit: 289 million
I doubt either number is meaningless and neither one is a negative number.
So great one what happens when revenue is greater than cost?staticneuron said:Revenue does not equal profit.
surly said:Sony are not about to post annual profits of 289 million, hence the thread title.
bigtroyjon said:They have lost almost a billion dollars in market cap in a day, 10 billion in the last 3 months. That is significant. Things can be turned around but they are in a scary position and can't afford anymore bad luck
offshore said:Wait, Sony's market cap is now just $26 billion? Jesus Christ.
If you ever needed an indication of how fucked up, mismanaged and irrelevant Sony have become, then there's your proof. It's just incredible how a company so large can be worth so little.
surly said:Sony make $75 billion each year? I think not. They've posted losses 3 years in a row now. Not even MS or Apple make 75 billion dollars a year in profit.
What happened to the thread title? I don't think that accurately reflects the situation at all. It wasn't like that when I was here earlier.
You make negative losses?RavenFox said:So great one what happens when revenue is greater than cost?
This is sort of how I feel now. Years ago, say the 90s, Sony was a king among pawns when it came to hardware and quality of product. Today they do not make a bad product but I feel they are no longer leading the charge for anything.Fernando Rocker said:Thing is...
They are not that relevant anymore... they don't have the best product of any class anymore...
Cameras? I prefer a Nikon or Canon than a Sony. SD, USB memories? I prefer a PNY. TV's? I think most people here at GAF prefer other brands than a Sony one.
Poor Sony... jack of all trades, master of none.
staticneuron said:Sorry, the way you responded made it seem like you didn't understand the infographic.
Revenue: 77.5 million
Profit: 289 million
I doubt either number is meaningless and neither one is a negative number.
staticneuron said:Of course because the infographic was talking about what happened last year.
Out of curiosity, what does Nintendo's market cap look like for 2007 vs 2011?teruterubozu said:Yup, but that was when it was 125 yen = $1. The dollar slide has killed all Japanese exporters.
CadetMahoney said:this thread to money market noobs:
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xbhaskarx said:I'm surprised this comment didn't provoke more of a negative reaction...
lunchwithyuzo said:Out of curiosity, what does Nintendo's market cap look like for 2007 vs 2011?
Elios83 said:This is a bad surprise but it's not as negative as it seems, because it does not affect the operative income and the cash flow of the company. The bad news is for shareholders who will get less money because of the reduced net income.
As far as I understand the point is that they will be facing significant costs because of the japanese earthquake. These costs will lower future taxable incomes to the point where they won't be able to recoup the deferred tax benefits they had before their expiration.
Let's make a small made-up example: a company has in 2011 a tax benefit of 100b yen which expires in fiscal 2012.That means that they don't have to pay taxes on the next 100 billion yen income they make in 2012. But what happens if in 2012 they make an income of just 10 billion yen? They lose their tax benefit on 90 billion yen, which means that they will have to pay taxes on a 90 billion yen future income which they could have avoided if their income was higher, in this example if they had recorded those 90 billion yens in fiscal 2012.
So in short: because of the costs associated with the japanese earthquake they think that they will be now forced to pay taxes for 3.2 billion dollars in the next few years which they could have avoided if their future incomes were higher. They have accounted for this 'loss' all in this quarter because they were probably forced to do so by law for fiscal clarity.
As I said the positive thing is that the operative side of things is not affected, which means that the company has not an actual profitability issue, the company can continue to operate normally, although if their profitability was better they could have avoided to pay such taxes.
It will be interesting on thursday to see the actual results per division without this valuation allowance and their shipment forecasts for the next fiscal year (PS3, NGP,PSP,etc).
Sony posted a loss of $439 million in the previous financial year and a loss of just over $1 billion the year before that. This will be the third year in a row that they have posted a loss.staticneuron said:Of course because the infographic was talking about what happened last year.
XiaNaphryz said:Do you know any good links to look into deferred taxes in general? It's one part of finance I haven't really looked into.
Joey Fox said:A valuation allowance is never a good thing.
Losing your deferred tax assets means that the auditors, based on principles such as GAAP, believe that your company will not be profitable fast enough to make use of the deferred tax assets.
Why is this a bad thing? I would have to look at the financials, but this is a bad thing because losing your deferred tax assets could lead to going concern questions. A going concern question calls into question the ability of the company to continue in existence for even the next year.
However, since Sony had an operating profit, this shouldn't be all that ominous. It also sucks that the loss from writing down DTAs all comes in the same period, when it was really more attributable to the last three years.
Keep in mind that just because a company has an operating profit doesn't mean they are healthy. If you have bad Net Incomes but good operating profits you could be looking at a change in ownership at some point. Most of all, and the reason I wrote this post, is that losing deferred tax assets is not in any way shape or form a good thing. Investors would sell the stock based off of that fact alone.
These posts appear to be saying the opposite of each other - damnit finance-GAF, can we get some consistency here for those of us trying to really understand this. :/Elios83 said:This is a bad surprise but it's not as negative as it seems, because it does not affect the operative income and the cash flow of the company. The bad news is for shareholders who will get less money because of the reduced net income.
As far as I understand the point is that they will be facing significant costs because of the japanese earthquake. These costs will lower future taxable incomes to the point where they won't be able to recoup the deferred tax benefits they had before their expiration.
Let's make a small made-up example: a company has in 2011 a tax benefit of 100b yen which expires in fiscal 2012.That means that they don't have to pay taxes on the next 100 billion yen income they make in 2012. But what happens if in 2012 they make an income of just 10 billion yen? They lose their tax benefit on 90 billion yen, which means that they will have to pay taxes on a 90 billion yen future income which they could have avoided if their income was higher, in this example if they had recorded those 90 billion yens in fiscal 2012.
So in short: because of the costs associated with the japanese earthquake they think that they will be now forced to pay taxes for 3.2 billion dollars in the next few years which they could have avoided if their future incomes were higher. They have accounted for this 'loss' all in this quarter because they were probably forced to do so by law for fiscal clarity.
As I said the positive thing is that the operative side of things is not affected, which means that the company has not an actual profitability issue, the company can continue to operate normally, although if their profitability was better they could have avoided to pay such taxes.
It will be interesting on thursday to see the actual results per division without this valuation allowance and their shipment forecasts for the next fiscal year (PS3, NGP,PSP,etc).
Revenue looks to be down, actually. It's in the OP.Dedication Through Light said:The response I was making was that it seems utterly incorrect to say Sony is "losing it" when their revenue was going up and up.
xbhaskarx said:Sony "unexpectedly reported a third straight annual loss" means they have not posted a profit in any of the last three years, so the profit figure from last year was in fact a negative number.
yurinka said:We'll know it this thursday. Looks like the answer is yes, because somewhere said they were going to meet their schedule (ignoring earthquakes, hacks and these whatever 3 years of taxes).
Maybe it's revenue (before substracting looses) and not profit (after substracting looses).
Jokeropia said:Revenue looks to be down, actually. It's in the OP.
They expect it to be up this fiscal year (ending March 2012), but as it just started it's a bit early to say anything about that.
jcm said:I don't know of any links, but I can give you a simplified explanation. The real accounting is significantly more complex.
Companies pay taxes on profits. If a company loses money, they obviously don't have to pay taxes. But in addition to have no tax bill due, you can actually carry forward the loss to next year, and deduct it from the income before you calculate your taxes. So, imagine the tax rate is 10%. In 2009, we made $1M, so we paid taxes of $100K. In 2010, we lost $1M, so we paid no taxes. In 2011, we made $2M. We would normally owe $200K, but we can carry forward our 2010 loss, and subtract it from 2011 profits. So our taxable earnings are only $1M, and our tax bill is only $100K.
So Sony has been losing money. They have been planning to deduct those losses from future profits, so when they do their earnings report, they actually count the money they will be saving on taxes in the future right now. Those are deferred tax assets. However, you can only carry forward losses for so long. And the GAAP accounting standards say that if you lose money for three years in row, you have to stop counting future tax savings as assets, because future tax savings only happen when you make a profit, and you haven't demonstrated any ability to make money. So now Sony has to take a big writeoff, because it's possible some or all of their future tax savings will never materialize.
There's no actual change in cash - they didn't have to write anyone a check. It's an accounting change reflecting future profits. It may be that they get all of the tax savings, or they might get some, or they might get none. But right now, they have to count it as none.
85 vs 28 or something like that.lunchwithyuzo said:Out of curiosity, what does Nintendo's market cap look like for 2007 vs 2011?
Very good explanation.jcm said:I don't know of any links, but I can give you a simplified explanation. The real accounting is significantly more complex.
Companies pay taxes on profits. If a company loses money, they obviously don't have to pay taxes. But in addition to have no tax bill due, you can actually carry forward the loss to next year, and deduct it from the income before you calculate your taxes. So, imagine the tax rate is 10%. In 2009, we made $1M, so we paid taxes of $100K. In 2010, we lost $1M, so we paid no taxes. In 2011, we made $2M. We would normally owe $200K, but we can carry forward our 2010 loss, and subtract it from 2011 profits. So our taxable earnings are only $1M, and our tax bill is only $100K.
So Sony has been losing money. They have been planning to deduct those losses from future profits, so when they do their earnings report, they actually count the money they will be saving on taxes in the future right now. Those are deferred tax assets. However, you can only carry forward losses for so long. And the GAAP accounting standards say that if you lose money for three years in row, you have to stop counting future tax savings as assets, because future tax savings only happen when you make a profit, and you haven't demonstrated any ability to make money. So now Sony has to take a big writeoff, because it's possible some or all of their future tax savings will never materialize.
There's no actual change in cash - they didn't have to write anyone a check. It's an accounting change reflecting future profits. It may be that they get all of the tax savings, or they might get some, or they might get none. But right now, they have to count it as none.
Fernando Rocker said:Thing is...
They are not that relevant anymore... they don't have the best product of any class anymore...
Cameras? I prefer a Nikon or Canon than a Sony. SD, USB memories? I prefer a PNY. TV's? I think most people here at GAF prefer other brands than a Sony one.
Poor Sony... jack of all trades, master of none.
XiaNaphryz said:These posts appear to be saying the opposite of each other - damnit finance-GAF, can we get some consistency here for those of us trying to really understand this. :/
The slide says that sales are expected to be up in the fiscal year ending March 2012, which at this point is just a prediction as the fiscal year just started.Dedication Through Light said:(A mere 0.5%?) I thought earlier it said up, that slide still says that sales were up which is what I addressed later in that post.
http://www.sony.net/SonyInfo/IR/financial/fr/index.htmlJoey Fox said:Like I said, I'll try to show you with Sony, if they have released their new financial statements somewhere I can download them.
XiaNaphryz said:These posts appear to be saying the opposite of each other - damnit finance-GAF, can we get some consistency here for those of us trying to really understand this. :/
Jokeropia said:The slide says that sales are expected to be up in the fiscal year ending March 2012, which at this point is just a prediction as the fiscal year just started.
M.D said:I keep hearing this in regards to Sony, but I can't understand why.
"They should focus on a narrower set of products, they're involved in too many markets" - Really? I mean, what do you suggest they pull out of? What do you think would be a better focus for them? Why do people think Sony should become a company like Apple and focus on just a couple of products?
staticneuron said:Is it me or people have not read the info graphic at all?
bigtroyjon said:Just about everything written in the second quote is incorrect.
Shipments don't give the whole picture. GFK and NPD and give Wii as a winner in Europe and NA last year with very big difference from PS3.apana said:That PS3 number will be impressive if it really is 15 million. The Wii sold 15 million for the fiscal year as well I believe. I wonder which one sold more.
Fernando Rocker said:Thing is...
They are not that relevant anymore... they don't have the best product of any class anymore...
Cameras? I prefer a Nikon or Canon than a Sony. SD, USB memories? I prefer a PNY. TV's? I think most people here at GAF prefer other brands than a Sony one.
Poor Sony... jack of all trades, master of none.