Nintendo shares dive as
company plays down Pokemon GO's earnings impact
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[July 25, 2016]
By Junko Fujita
TOKYO (Reuters) - Shares in Nintendo Co
tumbled as much as 18 percent on Monday after the company said
Pokemon GO would have a limited impact on its earnings - their
biggest setback so far after a huge run-up on the smash-hit game.
The Kyoto-based gaming company, which is due to report first-quarter
results this week, surprised markets with a statement on Friday that
income garnered through its 32 percent stake in affiliate Pokemon
Company, which owns the licensing rights, would be limited and that
it did not plan to revise its earnings outlook for now.
Recording its biggest decline since October 1990, the stock ended
down 17.7 percent, or by 5,000 yen - the daily limit allowed.
But some market players said Nintendo was being disingenuous, adding
that there were few expectations of upward revisions to its profit
targets so early after the game's launch and that it was clear the
game would be key to earnings.
"The market has overreacted to the Nintendo statement," said David
Gibson, a senior analyst at Macquarie Securities Group, noting the
game in Japan had broken records with 10 million downloads in one
day.

"I believe that Pokemon GO will be material in the company's
earnings given the current trends for the game."
Pokemon GO's success has triggered massive buying in Nintendo shares
and even with Monday's decline, the shares are still up some 60
percent compared with levels prior to the game's July 6 launch in
the United States, Australia and New Zealand, adding nearly $12
billion in market value.
Yasuo Sakuma, portfolio manager at Bayview Asset Management, said he
still saw the company's shares as cheap given the potential for
Nintendo to reap rewards from other strong character franchises as
it forays deeper into mobile gaming.
"Nintendo is well-placed to boost its earnings with its other
characters, such as Super Mario and Zelda and their potential is
unknown," he said.
Pokemon GO is Nintendo's first venture into mobile gaming as the
company had until recently been keen to protect its console business
from cannibalization.
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A fan of the augmented reality mobile game "Pokemon Go" by Nintendo
participate in a "poketour" organized by the municipality in San
Salvador, El Salvador July 23, 2016. REUTERS/Jose Cabezas

In addition to its stake in Pokemon Company, Nintendo has an undisclosed holding
in Niantic Inc - the game's developer, which was spun off from Google.
It is also expected to benefit from sales of Pokemon GO Plus - an accessory that
alerts players to nearby Pokemon so that they don't have to always be looking at
their smartphones. Nintendo said, however, that sales of the device have already
been factored into its earnings outlook.
Nintendo, which reports earnings on Wednesday, has forecast a 37 percent rise in
operating profit to 45 billion yen ($425 million) in the year to March. While it
is expected to see upside from Pokemon GO it will also have to contend with a
strong yen which eats into the value of earnings garnered abroad.
Seven analysts' estimates that have been revised since the game's launch range
from 36 billion yen to 60 billion yen.
($1 = 106.2400 yen)
(Reporting by Junko Fujita; Additional reporting by Ayai Tomisawa and Chang-Ran
Kim in Tokyo and Anshuman Daga in Singapore; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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