Sharp Board Under Pressure to Consider Taiwanese Bid
February 03 2016 - 7:00AM
Dow Jones News
TOKYO—The board of Sharp Corp. is scheduled to meet Thursday to
weigh competing takeover offers from a Japanese government-backed
investment fund and Foxconn, but it is under growing pressure to
postpone a decision to examine the Taiwanese electronics
assembler's bid more closely, according to people familiar with the
situation.
One person briefed on the situation said Wednesday that at least
some of Sharp's outside directors were pushing fellow board members
to take another look at Foxconn's bid, which is higher than the
offer from the government-backed investment fund known as
Innovation Network Corp. of Japan.
Though Foxconn has offered more than twice as much as the fund,
people familiar with the situation have said the fund holds the
inside track because Tokyo is reluctant to let Sharp's expertise in
making smartphone screens fall into foreign hands.
But Foxconn Chief Executive Terry Gou traveled to Japan last
week to make a personal appeal for his bid, which Foxconn raised
last week to ¥ 659 billion ($5.5 billion), according to people
familiar with the matter. That compares with an offer from INCJ
that these people say is worth no more than ¥ 300 billion.
Sharp and INCJ declined to comment. Foxconn, which is formally
known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., wasn't immediately
available for comment.
Sharp's lenders, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. and Mizuho
Financial Group Inc., were also asking the board to give the
Foxconn offer another look, another person familiar with the
situation said. One person said Sharp had not presented a decision
to the banks as of Wednesday and said there is no guarantee that
the company will choose or announce a winner Thursday.
Company executives and other insiders outnumber outside
directors on Sharp's board by 8 to 5, so they could easily outvote
the outsiders. But new regulations, adopted in the wake of
high-profile accounting scandals in Japan, urge companies to pay
more attention to outside directors in an effort to improve
governance.
Sharp is under growing financial pressure because of a downward
spiral in the price of liquid display panels, caused by a slowdown
in the growth of smartphone sales and rising competition from South
Korean, Chinese and other producers. The company's consumer
electronics and appliance operations were already troubled, and
Sharp has turned to its banks for bailouts twice in less than four
years.
Sharp is set to report quarterly earnings Thursday, and analysts
expect the figures to deepen the company's predicament. They expect
Sharp to forecast a record net loss for the full financial year
ending March 31. According to 11 analysts surveyed by FactSet,
Sharp is expected to report ¥ 691.1 billion in revenue and ¥ 7.2
billion in profit for the October-December period, down from
revenue of ¥ 762.7 billion and profit of ¥ 22 billion a year
earlier.
The Japanese government wants to support its struggling
electronics industry and considers liquid crystal displays a
strategic industry, analysts say. INCJ, which is majority owned by
the government and overseen by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and
Industry, is also the largest shareholder in Japan's other major
LCD provider, Japan Display Inc.
Japan Display was formed through a merger of the troubled LCD
units of Sony Corp., Toshiba Corp. and Hitachi Ltd. The fund also
stepped in to rescue Renesas Electronics Corp., which fused
together the semiconductor businesses of Hitachi, Mitsubishi
Electric Corp. and NEC Corp.
Both Sharp and Japan Display supply smartphone display panels to
Apple Inc., and government officials and analysts have said there
could be synergies to combining their operations. But Foxconn's Mr.
Gou has also pitched potential synergies, touting the potential
benefits of bringing Sharp's panel business under the same
corporate umbrella as the biggest assembler of iPhones and tapping
into Foxconn's extensive connections to other smartphone
providers.
Foxconn has offered to assume Sharp's bank debts, which total
about ¥ 700 billion, people familiar with the situation have
said.
Wayne Ma in Hong Kong and Eva Dou in Beijing contributed to this
article.
Write to Eric Pfanner at eric.pfanner@wsj.com, Takashi Mochizuki
at takashi.mochizuki@wsj.com and Atsuko Fukase at
atsuko.fukase@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 03, 2016 06:45 ET (11:45 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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