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Nintendo raises forecast for full-year profit due to strong Switch demand

Nintendo sold approximately 2.9 million Switch consoles this summer 

Makiko Yamazaki
Monday 30 October 2017 09:18 GMT
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Supply shortages for the Nintendo Switch have begun to ease
Supply shortages for the Nintendo Switch have begun to ease (Getty)

Japanese videogames maker Nintendo raised its full-year operating profit forecast on Monday as supply shortages on its new Switch games console began to ease.

Strong demand for the hybrid home-portable Switch console, following the flop of predecessor Wii U, has led to a near-doubling of Nintendo’s stock price to nine-year highs since the device’s March launch.

The games maker forecast profit of 120bn yen (£803.66m) for the year ending March, from 65bn yen estimated three months ago. The new outlook is still below a Thomson Reuters Starmine SmartEstimate of 133.60bn yen drawn from the projections of 22 analysts.

Nintendo also raised its annual Switch sales forecast to 14 million units from 10 million units.

“We’ve boosted Switch production in order to meet strong demand from our customers as it was difficult for customers to buy the consoles at retail stores,” Nintendo President Tatsumi Kimishima said at an earnings briefing on Monday.

Nintendo sold about 2.9 million Switch consoles in the three months through September, bringing the cumulative total to 7.63 million units.

The Switch’s early success has fuelled hopes for strong earnings in the coming years for Nintendo, as solid demand for new consoles is widely regarded as a prelude to strong sales of high-margin game software sales over several years.

The Switch, however, is set for stiffer competition into the year-end holiday shopping season as Microsoft releases its high-powered, high-resolution Xbox One X console on 7 November.

“The true power of the Switch would be tested during the upcoming holiday season,” Mr Kimishima said.

Nintendo is trying to reduce its reliance on the console business and stabilise fluctuating profit by moving into new areas for the company such as smartphone gaming and theme parks.

Reuters

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