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Businesses

Toshiba Might Spin Off Its Semiconductor Business (fortune.com) 12

Toshiba is considering spinning off its semiconductor business and selling a partial stake in the unit to Western Digital, the Nikkei financial daily reported on Wednesday. From the report: Toshiba will sell a roughly 20% interest in the unit for about 200 billion yen-300 billion yen ($1.77 billion-$2.66 billion) while retaining a majority stake, the newspaper reported. Besides Western Digital, U.S. investment funds are also showing interest in Toshiba's semiconductor business, the Nikkei reported, sources familiar with the matter.
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Toshiba Might Spin Off Its Semiconductor Business

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  • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2017 @03:27PM (#53683989)
    ...aren't semiconductors what basically underpin nearly all of Toshiba's products, and aren't their semiconductors routinely sold to other companies for their products as well?
    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2017 @03:47PM (#53684095)

      ...aren't semiconductors what basically underpin nearly all of Toshiba's products

      Sure. But like most users of semiconductors, they can just buy what they need. There is no reason to make stuff in-house unless it is a core competency that you are good at. Toshiba is not particularly good at making semiconductors.

      Toshiba is financially distressed, and they need to raise cash, so that is why they are selling off chunks of the company.

      Anyway, under the terms of this deal, they will retain majority control, even though it would likely make more sense to sell the semiconductor division off completely. Indecisive, partial solutions like this are typical of the Japanese management style, and are a big reason why Toshiba is in trouble in the first place.

      • by slew ( 2918 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2017 @04:08PM (#53684219)

        Indecisive, partial solutions like this are typical of the Japanese management style, and are a big reason why Toshiba is in trouble in the first place.

        Aren't they in trouble because they overstated profits by about $2B in a giant corporate accounting scandal spanning 7 years and purging their CEO and board members?

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Indecisive, partial solutions like this are typical of the Japanese management style, and are a big reason why Toshiba is in trouble in the first place.

          Aren't they in trouble because they overstated profits by about $2B in a giant corporate accounting scandal spanning 7 years and purging their CEO and board members?

          The main reason is Fukushima. Toshiba (and Siemens, and Alstom) had made huge investments in nuclear power in the years just before 2011. Coal power was obviously a dead product in 1st world countries even then, natural gas is expensive in many countries (except the USA), and renewables need a weather-independent backstop. A nuclear renaissance appeared to be on the horizon, every major compeditor was preparing for it. Alstom build a huge new facility in Chattanooga ($300M+)and spent roughly $1B in Nucl

      • One thing they could do - try selling it to AMD or any company that would like some extra capacity, like Global Foundries. Although I was under the impression that they had sold it ages ago

    • by Kergan ( 780543 )

      Nuclear is the other big chunk of their business.

      • by slew ( 2918 )

        Nuclear is the other big chunk of their business.

        If you define "business" as potentially being profitable (3 out of 5 years like their IRS), Nuclear is their new hobby, not their business...

  • I wonder when they will put the prices up.

  • Is toshiba going to go bust soon ? Does not look good at all Hal @ www.cctvsecuritycameraswarehouse.com.au

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