Toshiba pushes sale of
nuclear unit Westinghouse as crisis deepens
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[March 14, 2017]
By Makiko Yamazaki and Taiga Uranaka
TOKYO
(Reuters) - Toshiba Corp is 'actively considering' a sale and other
strategic options for U.S. nuclear unit Westinghouse, the group said on
Tuesday, as it expanded a probe into problems there that caused it to
miss an earnings deadline for a second time.
The Japanese conglomerate said it believed it could find buyers for a
majority stake in Westinghouse despite the potential for future losses
as the unit had a stable fuel and services business.
But Chief Executive Satoshi Tsunakawa sidestepped questions about a
potential Chapter 11 filing for Westinghouse, saying only there were
various options. Sources have said bankruptcy lawyers have been hired as
an exploratory step.
A sale would represent the latest in a series of drastic steps as
Toshiba grapples with a multibillion dollar financial maelstrom stemming
from Westinghouse's ill-fated purchase of a U.S. nuclear power plant
construction company in 2015.
It has already put up most or even all of its prized memory chip
business for sale to cope with an upcoming $6.3 billion writedown for
the nuclear business and to create a buffer for potential losses down
the road.
Westinghouse has been plagued by huge cost overruns at two U.S. projects
in Georgia and South Carolina and liabilities related to those projects
mean it is unlikely to be an easy asset to sell, despite attractive
technology.
Tsunakawa emphasized that the projects were only a small part of
Westinghouse's business.
"Around 80 percent of Westinghouse's revenues come from stable
businesses in services and fuel-related businesses so I think that will
be taken into consideration too," he told a news conference.
He added, however, that it was not yet clear yet whether Toshiba would
be paid by the buyer or would have to pay the buyer to take Westinghouse
off its hands.
Toshiba aims to have Westinghouse off its consolidated accounts by the
end of the next financial year in March 2018, he said.
KEPCO INTEREST?
South Korea's KEPCO is seen by industry executives as the only potential
buyer, as it expands in nuclear after a successful deal in the United
Arab Emirates.
KEPCO said on Tuesday it would consider an approach by Toshiba. "We will
review the overall project and weigh how beneficial this project would
be to us," a spokesman said.
Earlier in the day, Toshiba said its auditing committee had confirmed
that certain Westinghouse senior managers had exerted 'inappropriate
pressure' in the accounting for the acquisition of the U.S. nuclear
power plant construction company in its third-quarter earnings.
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Toshiba Corp CEO Satoshi Tsunakawa attends a news conference at the
company's headquarters in Tokyo, Japan March 14, 2017. REUTERS/Issei
Kato
The
TVs-to-construction conglomerate now needs to check if pressure was exerted in
preceding quarters as it would also be filing nine-month results and whether
there were 'other inappropriate pressures' at the time of the acquisition.
Toshiba, for whom the latest scandal is its second in two years, said it would
also introduce fresh measures to overhaul its governance, including improving
board level oversight, internal controls, risk management and headquarters' grip
on the activities of its affiliates.
It estimated that it could post an operating profit of 70 billion yen ($610
million) in the next financial year excluding Westinghouse and its chips
business, and also forecast an operating profit of 210 billion yen two years
later.
Its remaining business focus would be social infrastructure such as elevators,
water treatment and railway systems.
Those forecasts helped its stock recover from sharp losses to end 0.5 percent
higher on the day.
Tsunakawa separately confirmed that Toshiba would be taking national security
concerns into account when selecting bidders for its memory chip unit. That
stance would put U.S. suitors at a major advantage as Japan's government is
worried about the loss of key technology to China.
Toshiba gained a new extension until April 11 for third-quarter earnings which
follow its first postponement of audited earnings a month ago. If it fails to
meet that deadline and does not gain another extension it would have until April
21 to submit the earnings or be delisted.
Toshiba is also due to submit on Wednesday a report to the Tokyo Stock Exchange
on its internal controls in the wake of its latest financial woes as well the
2015 accounting scandal. That could eventually also lead to a delisting if the
bourse finds Toshiba's efforts unsatisfactory.
It will also meet with creditor banks on Wednesday to explain the situation,
sources familiar with the matter said.
(Reporting by Makiko Yamazaki and Taiga Uranaka; Additional reporting by Jane
Chung in Seoul; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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