Pokemon game adds $7.5
billion to Nintendo market value in two days
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[July 11, 2016]
TOKYO (Reuters) - Shares in Japan's
Nintendo Co Ltd soared again on Monday, bringing market-value gains to
$7.5 billion in just two days as investors cheered the runaway success
of Pokemon GO - its first long-awaited venture in mobile gaming.
The game, which marries a classic 20-year old franchise with augmented
reality, allows players to walk around real-life neighborhoods while
seeking virtual Pokemon game characters on their smartphone screens - a
scavenger hunt that has earned enthusiastic early reviews.
In the United States, by July 8 - two days after its release - it was
installed on more than 5 percent of Android devices in the country,
according to web analytics firm SimilarWeb.
It is now on more Android phones than dating app Tinder and its rate of
daily active users was neck and neck with social network Twitter, the
analytics firm said. The game is also being played an average of 43
minutes a day, more time spent than on WhatsApp or Instagram, it added.
As the game took the U.S. by storm, Nintendo's shares surged by a
quarter in value on Monday to their highest level since November. They
have gained 36 percent since Thursday's close with the initial momentum
coming from the game shooting to the top of free app rankings in Apple
Inc's <AAPL.O> U.S. iTunes store.
The game has been released in the United States, Australia and New
Zealand. Launches for other countries including Japan - one of the
world's biggest gaming markets - are due soon.
Pokemon GO may not prove an immediate boost to Nintendo's bottom line:
it is free and Nintendo is not the sole investor or creator.
The game itself was created by Niantic, spun off from Google last year,
and Pokemon Company. Nintendo owns a third of Pokemon Company and both
have undisclosed stakes in Niantic, which had already developed a
similar augmented reality, multi-player game in 2012.
Some analysts have been upbeat about the money-making potential for
Pokemon GO, largely from small purchases made while playing - and the
positive signs for other mobile gaming launches planned by Nintendo for
2016 and 2017.
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People ride escalators past an advertisement of the Nintendo Co
videogame maker at an electronic retailer in Tokyo, Japan, April 25,
2016. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
"If nothing else, Pokémon GO has shown that there are 'dormant' Nintendo
fans eager to trial its content for smartphones," Deutsche Bank analysts
said in a note.
But others cautioned that there were still large question marks over whether
Pokemon GO will be able to generate the kind of sustained excitement that would
significantly boost Nintendo's earnings - particularly given that the company
now has to contend with a sharp strengthening in the yen.
Real change, those investors say, would have to come from the core console
business.
"Now if we were talking about its next generation console becoming the core
platform for gamers, then that would be something to get excited about - but at
the moment, this alone is not enough," said Yoshihiro Okumura, general manager
at Chibagin Asset Management.
($1 = 100.77 yen)
(Reporting by Ayai Tomisawa, Makiko Yamazaki and Yoshiyasu Shida; Writing by
Clara Ferreira-Marques; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell and Edwina Gibbs)
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