By Taro Fuse
TOKYO (Reuters) – Toshiba Corp expects to book
charges of 300 billion to 400 billion yen ($ 2.4-3.2 billion) related to
improper accounting, people briefed on the matter said on Wednesday, as
Japan’s biggest accounting scandal in years expands.
The charges
include six years of overstated profits uncovered by an independent
panel probing the electronics conglomerate’s accounting irregularities,
as well as various writedowns, the people told Reuters.
It was not
clear how much of that amount would be booked in the business year that
ended in March of this year. Toshiba has been unable to close its books
for the latest business year due to the scandal, and suspended its
year-end dividend payout.
A Toshiba spokesman declined to comment.
The company will file its earnings in late August, the sources said.
Toshiba’s
stock price has sunk 27 percent since early April on Japan’s biggest
accounting scandal since camera maker Olympus admitted in 2011 that it
used M&A deals to conceal investment losses.
The third-party
panel, appointed by Toshiba after the accounting irregularities emerged,
has found 170 billion yen in overstated profits, the sources said. This
is far above the 54.8 billion yen the company initially disclosed in
June.
In addition to a charge on the overstated profits, the
sources said, Toshiba is expected to post writedowns on the value of
chipmaking facilities and on deferred tax assets, or credits that can be
used to reduce future tax bills.
Toshiba, which has 1.2 trillion
yen in capital, is considering the sale of unused facilities,
cross-shareholdings and non-core businesses to shore up its capital, the
sources said.
(Additional reporting by Reiji Murai; Writing by Taiga Uranaka; Editing by William Mallard and Edmund Klamann)
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