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Toshiba President LIkely to Resign Over Accounting Scandal

July 13, 2015
The technology conglomerate reportedly overstated around 200 billion yen ($1.6 billion) in its group operating profits from 2009 to 2014, according to Japanese media.

TOKYO — An accounting scandal involving Japanese conglomerate Toshiba deepened over the weekend as reports said the company’s president would likely be forced to resign.

The resignation of Toshiba president Hisao Tanaka will be finalized after a third-party panel tasked with investigating the scandal releases its report as early as this week, the Kyodo news agency said, citing unnamed sources.

The Japanese firm, which makes everything from batteries to nuclear reactors, has allegedly overstated around 200 billion yen ($1.6 billion) in its group operating profits for the five years to March 2014, Kyodo and Jiji Press said.

The accounting irregularities are believed to have affected its mainstay infrastructure-related, semiconductor, television and personal computer businesses.

Tanaka and former president and current vice chairman Norio Sasaki are among those behind the profit-padding, the reports said, as they allegedly put excessive pressure on subordinates to achieve profit targets.

Sasaki, who served as Toshiba president from June 2009 to June 2013 — covering most of the period during which the company allegedly padded its profits — will also resign over the scandal, Japanese media have said.

Toshiba has said it was revoking its earnings forecast — a 120 billion yen ($972 million) net profit on sales of 6.7 trillion yen ($54.3 billion) — for the past fiscal year and would not pay a dividend.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2015

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