Japanese giant Sony hiked its full-year forecasts on Thursday, as a weaker yen compensates for its ageing PlayStation games console and a memory chip crunch.
Sony now expects net profit of 1.13 trillion yen ($7.2 billion) in the 2025-26 fiscal year, up from its previous projection of 1.05 trillion yen, and a six percent rise on last year.
It also projected a 20.6 percent rise in operating profit and revenues of 12.3 trillion yen, up 2.2 percent, as well as an improved operating margin of 12.5 percent, a statement said.
For its third quarter, Sony's net profit rose 11 percent and revenues were up one percent. Operating income of 515 billion yen beat analysts' expectations.
Sony's PlayStation 5 (PS5), launched in 2020, is beginning to get old, and sales volumes of the games console fell 16 percent in the last quarter.
The company offered steep discounts on the device last year in an attempt to boost demand.
However, the Japanese group, like its competitors worldwide, is suffering from a growing shortage of memory chips.
That is driving up the prices of the chips and eroding profit margins of all sorts of electronic goods.
Shares in Nintendo, maker of the rival Switch 2, dived 11 percent on Wednesday over concerns about software sales and the impact of the memory chip supply crunch.
Sony shares initially soared almost six percent on Thursday but were flat in late trade in a falling overall market.
The artificial intelligence boom has pushed up prices and shipments of conventional NAND and DRAM memory chips, while demand for high‑bandwidth memory (HBM) chips used in AI servers has soared.
"It will definitely get more difficult to offer reduced prices (of the PS5) this year than in 2025," gaming industry consultant Serkan Toto told AFP.
Sony made no comment on the chip issue in its earnings release, which analysts say could also hit its hardware products such as cameras, TVs and smartphones, as well as its image sensor segment.
Last month, Sony said it was spinning off its home entertainment business -- which includes TVs -- into a joint venture with Chinese giant TCL.
It might also force Sony to delay the launch of a potential PlayStation 6 to the second quarter of 2028, Yasuo Nakane from Mizuho said in a recent note.
The hotly anticipated upcoming release of "Grand Theft Auto VI" is also important for the PlayStation's continued sales.
GTA's creators Rockstar Games delayed the launch again last year, this time until November.
"In 2026, GTA VI will do to PS5 what COVID did a few years ago to Sony: provide a massive boost, enough to carry the platform to 2028," Toto said. "Nobody doubts that GTA VI will be the biggest game launch (and perhaps of an entertainment product) of all time."
Sony is also banking on growth in the music division thanks to increased sales related to concerts and merchandise, while results are expected to stagnate in film and consumer electronics.
It began reducing its exposure to this low-margin sector several years ago to focus on entertainment and imaging technologies, its main growth drivers.
Sony's forecast for the estimated impact of tariffs this year imposed on Japanese imports by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration remained at 50 billion yen.
© 2026 AFP
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CaptDingleheimer
Surprised they're even still in business.
Negative Nancy
PS5 is far from being old, and I don't even know why that is even suggested. Sales of the console will inevitably drop after five years because people who want one at this stage will already have one. Its very unlikely people would want or need two of them.
I've always thought that one of the grerat things (but from a business point of view maybe one of the worst things) is that it is backwards compatible. There are some really tremendous PS4 games that are fully playable on PS5. The step up from PS4 to PS5 is not so huge, so people will be more willing to pay for PS4 games at discount than PS5 games at full price. I have tonnes of games but very rarely buy anything new when it comes out. It usually takes a good long while for a console to be pushed to its true limits enough to justify the next one, and I don't think PS5 is near that limit yet.