Sony has lost roughly $10 billion in stock value, as shareholders reevaluate the company's investment promise in light of an adjusted PS5 sales forecast and lower-than-expected operating margins in the last fiscal quarter. This news follows Sony's controversial comments about the PS5 entering the «latter stage» of its life cycle, which prompted a wave of discontent among PlayStation users on social media.
Despite outperforming Xbox's current-generation consoles at a two-to-one ratio, it would appear that the PS5 did not meet Sony's expectations for the last quarter. Sony had previously indicated that it expected to ship 25 million PS5 units during the 2023 fiscal year, but winter quarter console sales have led the tech manufacturer to adjust this number to 21 million units. Sony CFO Hiroki Totoki explained these lower-than-expected sales with the «latter stage» comment, asserting that the console would naturally begin to sell less until the release of the PS6. Totoki also stated that no «major» new first-party titles would launch for the console until at least March 2025.
As reported by CNBC, Sony's stock has taken a dive, resulting in a calculated $10 billion loss in value. While the cut to the PS5's sales projection may have played a role in this devaluation, analysts are arguing that the operating margins for the company's gaming division are actually playing a more significant role. CNBC calculates that Sony's operating margins during the December quarter clocked in at just under 6%, a drop of more than 3% from the same period in 2022, and just half of the operating margins during the highly profitable January-to-March quarter of 2022.
Analysts are describing Sony's operating margins at «near decade lows.» At the same time, Sony's game sales are looking good, as are the sales of its digital content and expansions, leading many to wonder what exactly is behind these surprisingly low margins. There could be a number of reasons for this, but software development costs
Read more on gamerant.com