By - Press Release
Category - Business Plan
Source - http://finance.yahoo.com/news/olympus-targets-jump-financial-stability-065031986.html
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| Business Plan |
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's Olympus Corp (TYO:7733) aims to boost its shareholders' equity ratio,
a key measure of capital stability, by roughly seven-fold to 30 percent
in five years, indicating the scandal-tainted company may have to raise
capital.
Olympus,
the world's leading maker of diagnostic endoscopes, is struggling to
recover from a $1.7 billion accounting fraud uncovered last year by its
then-CEO, Michael Woodford.
Shareholders' equity in Olympus was 4.6 percent of its
total assets as of end-March, far below the 20 percent level widely
regarded as indicative of financial stability for a company.
"We will realize stable operations by swiftly improving the shareholders' equity ratio," President Hiroyuki Sasa told a news conference on Friday to detail the company's medium-term strategy.
Sasa also said the company will focus on its core businesses and consider selling, shrinking, or shedding peripheral divisions.
To mend its dented balance sheet, Olympus has considered bringing in a strategic investor, with Sony Corp <6758.T>, Fujifilm Holdings Corp <4901.T>, Terumo Corp (4543.T) and Panasonic Corp <6752.T> identified as possible candidates.
Panasonic denied on Thursday a media report that it
would invest up to 50 billion yen in Olympus, while Fujifilm said it is
still interested in a tie-up.
Olympus shares ended down 3.6 percent on Friday ahead
of the announcements. They had slumped as much as 80 percent after the
accounting fraud unfolded in October, but have since recovered to about
half of the pre-scandal level, valuing the company at around 365 billion
yen ($4.6 billion). ($1 = 79.5700 Japanese yen)
Source - http://finance.yahoo.com/news/olympus-targets-jump-financial-stability-065031986.html

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