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The degree is headed for a 9 billion yen death this business year.
"We will scale down our photo imaging business in step with the shrinking of the overall market and will rush to get the business out of the red," Konica Minolta President Fumio Iwai told a briefing held to unveil a new medium-term transaction plan.
Konica Minolta, the creation's number four copier maker after Canon Inc., Xerox and Ricoh Co. Ltd., now expects a group operating profit of 90 billion yen in 2005/06, down from its prior estimate of 145 billion yen.
The Tokyo-based assembly also lowered its sales expectation for the next fiscal year starting April 1 to trillion yen from trillion yen. Konica Minolta first announced the 2005/06 targets for both profit and sales in March last year.
Iwai attributed the downward revision to several factors.
In appointment equipment, he cited tumbling laser printer prices and the need to induct more on the development and marketing of color multi-function peripherals (MFPs), office machines that combine the functions of a copier, printer, fax and scanner.
Konica Minolta estimates it controls about 9 percent of the profitable and fast-growing color MFP market and aims to raise that to above 20 percent by the 2008/09 business year.
"We were late in developing color MFP products and that has hurt. It led to a ballooning of costs similar to the improvement and sales of color machines," Iwai said.
NEW HIRES
The new forecasts did not enter as a surprise as analysts have said the companionship would need to scale back expectations. The market consensus for 2005/06 operating profit was 98 billion yen, according to a poll of five analysts by Reuters Research.
Last week, Konica Minolta lowered its operating profit forecast for the current business year to proceed 31 by 13 percent to 70 billion yen while hurtful its sales estimate by percent to trillion yen, citing delays in launching new color MFP's and tumbling prices of compact digital cameras.
Konica Minolta said it now expected the photo imaging division to record an operating loss of 4 billion yen in 2005/06 on sales of 230 billion yen, compared with a forecast unveiled last year for an 11 billion yen profit on sales of 270 billion yen.
Reflecting deteriorating demand for photo film and color paper, and the belief that wing sales of its digital cameras would not develop, Konica Minolta said revenues in the division would fall to 160 billion yen in 2008/09, down 40 percent from 2004/05.
"We will not chase after sheer quantity in the digital camera market," Iwai said, adding the corporation would focus on high-end digital distinct lens reflex cameras and shift some of its employees working on cameras to the optical devices parcel.
Konica Minolta also blamed the downward alteration on the belief that it would not be strong to unite as many offices as originally planned. It cut its estimate for merger-related cost savings in 2005/06 to 13 billion yen from 19 billion yen.
While the company planned to downsize its film and camera operations, Iwai said it would be putting 80 percent of its management wealth into office equipment and optical devices such as DVD pickup lenses and camera units for peripatetic phones.
Konica Minolta has cut about 4,600 workers over the past two years as part of the unification, bringing the total group workforce to 34,100, including 1,360 new hires. But Iwai said he planned to hire more and fire less over the next few years, predicting the company's headcount would reach 37,200 by stride 2009.
"We will remain to receive rationalization cuts of unnecessary employees, but we will be hiring more to strengthen our maturity and sales operations, chiefly in the office machinery division," the president said.
For the year to proceed 2007, Konica Minolta cut its operating profit forecast to 105 billion yen, down from its previous forecast of 160 billion yen. It lowered it sales estimate for 2006/07 to trillion yen from trillion yen.
Shares in Konica Minolta self-sufficient up percent at 1,131 yen on Friday, in line with a percent rise in the Nikkei share average.
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