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						Toshiba woes intensify on 
						reports of $6 billion writedown, shares plummet 
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		 [January 19, 2017] 
		By Kentaro Hamada and Taiga Uranaka 
 TOKYO 
		(Reuters) - Toshiba Corp's financial crisis deepened on Thursday as 
		media reported it may unveil a bigger-than-expected $6 billion writedown 
		for its U.S. nuclear business, sending its shares sliding 16 percent.
 
 The reports cast doubt on whether steps by the scandal-hit conglomerate 
		to bolster its finances - including the possible sale of a stake in its 
		core chip business to business partner Western Digital Corp - will be 
		sufficient to address the shortfall.
 
 Toshiba executives met with some of its main banks on Thursday to 
		discuss possible support, sources with knowledge of the matter said. The 
		142-year old firm has also approached the government-backed Development 
		Bank of Japan (DBJ) for help.
 
 Battered by an accounting scandal in 2015, Toshiba was plunged back into 
		crisis late last year after it emerged that it would have to write down 
		cost overruns at projects handled by a U.S nuclear power plant 
		construction firm which was recently acquired by its Westinghouse 
		division.
 
 Takeshi Kunibe, the president of Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp <8316.T>, 
		one of its main banks, told a briefing the lender would like to support 
		Toshiba as much as possible.
 
		
		 
		"We would like to discuss courses of action after Toshiba comes up with 
		specific figures and its plans," he said.
 A DBJ spokesman said there had been no discussion about the amount or 
		type of assistance Toshiba might require. Representatives for Mizuho 
		Bank <8411.T>, another main lender, declined to comment.
 
 Sources familiar with the matter had previously flagged the size of the 
		expected charge at more than 500 billion yen ($4.4 billion). Kyodo news 
		agency and other domestic media said that estimates had now ballooned to 
		700 billion yen, in part due to unfavorable currency rates.
 
 Toshiba declined to comment on its meetings with banks and said it had 
		yet to determine the size of the writedown.
 
 Separately, in an apparent sign of confidence in Toshiba, a government 
		filing showed BlackRock Inc <BLK.N> now had a stake of 5 percent in the 
		conglomerate, likely making the asset manager its top shareholder.
 
 That represents an increase after its holding slipped from that level. 
		Toshiba said last year it had been informed by BlackRock that it owned 5 
		percent as of March although Toshiba was not able to identify the 
		holdings. The filings are only made when a stake reaches 5 percent. 
		BlackRock was not immediately available for comment.
 
 SPIN-OFF AND ASSET SALES
 
 Put on the Tokyo bourse's watchlist after the accounting scandal, the 
		laptops-to-nuclear conglomerate is not able to tap equity markets for 
		funding.
 
			
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			A logo of Toshiba Corp is seen behind a red light signal outside an 
			electronics retail store in Tokyo, Japan, January 19, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Toru Hanai 
             
It has 
said it is looking at splitting off its chips business - which accounts for the 
bulk of its operating profit - into a separate company.
 It wants to sell a minority stake in the memory chip business and is considering 
potential buyers including Western Digital Corp, a source familiar with the 
matter said this week.
 
 Media reports have put the size of that stake sale at around 20 percent. 
Toshiba's chips unit could be worth more than 1 trillion yen ($8.9 billion), 
industry sources have previously said.
 
 Western Digital, a California-based data storage company, operates a Japanese 
NAND flash memory plant with Toshiba. It has declined to comment on the issue.
 
 "The key thing to watch here is whether Toshiba's liabilities will exceed its 
assets. If that happens it will be difficult for some banks to step up with new 
financing," said Mana Nakazora, chief credit analyst at BNP Paribas.
 
Toshiba's shareholder equity, which represents its accumulated reserves, stood 
at 363.2 billion yen at the end of September, just 7.5 percent of total assets.
 Nakazora said, however, she did not expect Toshiba to default on its debt as its 
main banks would stick by it, adding that some sort of package involving asset 
sales, financing and capital from the government would likely be arranged.
 
 Shares in Toshiba slid as much as 26 percent on Thursday, but pared losses to 
finish 16 percent lower, giving it a market value of about $9 billion.
 
 National broadcaster NHK reported that Toshiba, which employs almost 190,000 
people in businesses ranging from washing machines and elevators to sewerage 
plants and batteries, was looking to sell some units and other assets to raise 
300 billion yen in cash.
 
 
(Reporting by Kentaro Hamada, Taro Fuse and Taiga Uranaka; Additional reporting 
by Daiki Iga, Junko Fujita, Ayai Tomisawa and Yoshiyuki Osada; Writing by Tim 
Kelly; Editing by Edwina Gibbs) 
				 
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