Sony president to step down

7 January 2012

Howard Stringer, the Welsh-born American head of Japanese games, music and electronics giant Sony, is to step down as the firm’s president, reports said Saturday, while remaining CEO and chairman.

The move puts his reported successor Kazuo Hirai, a games and music veteran who is currently executive deputy president, in pole position to ultimately take over at the top of the company.

Sony is planning a drastic restructuring under Hirai to try to return to profit, the Nikkei economic daily said, pointing out the group is braced to report its fourth consecutive annual loss for the year ending in March.

Sony has been mired in the red with its television business losing money. It has been hit by a strong yen, hacker attacks on its PlayStation Network, and both Japan’s earthquake-tsunami disaster and floods in Thailand last year.

Stringer became chairman and chief executive in 2005 as the first foreign chief at Sony, and added the presidency to his roles in 2009.

The 69-year-old has dismissed speculation that he will be stepping down at the end of the company’s fiscal year.

Jiji Press news agency said he had decided to shed the post of president because of the unusual concentration of power in him holding the company’s top three positions.

Hirai, 51, has spent most of his career at Sony in videogames, movies, music and other software businesses, playing a major role in developing the PlayStation in the 1990s.

He was promoted to deputy president in April last year in a move seen by analysts as signalling a greater focus on pushing content to multiple hardware platforms such as game consoles, smartphones and tablet computers.

Stringer said last year that Hirai was an “obvious candidate” to succeed him as Sony’s leader.

The company would not confirm the reports on Saturday, saying in a statement that “nothing has been determined at this time”.

Source: SAPA-AFP
You have read 2 out of 5 free articles. Log in or register for unlimited access.

Read now

The best gaming website in South Africa
MyGaming proudly displays the “FAIR” stamp of the Press Council of South Africa, indicating our commitment to adhere to the Code of Ethics for Print and online media which prescribes that our reportage is truthful, accurate and fair. Should you wish to lodge a complaint about our news coverage, please lodge a complaint on the Press Council’s website, www.presscouncil.org.za or email the complaint to [email protected] Contact the Press Council on 011 4843612.