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EV maker Nidec posts quarterly loss, hit by restructuring costs

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FILE PHOTO: Nidec Corp's logo is pictured at an earnings results news conference in Tokyo, Japan, July 25, 2018. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
Nidec Corp's logo is pictured at an earnings results news conference in Tokyo, Japan, July 25, 2018. The Kyoto-based electric car manufacturer Nidec has reported a 6 billion yen operating loss as it struggles with competition from China. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo

TOKYO – Japanese electric motor maker Nidec on Tuesday posted an unexpected operating loss for the January to March quarter, hit by the costs of restructuring steps taken to deal with fierce price competition in China’s electric vehicle market.

The company’s fourth-quarter operating loss was 6.17 billion yen ($40 million), undershooting an average estimate for a 21.48 billion yen profit in a survey of eight analysts by LSEG.

Nidec has sought to tap a growing share of the battery-powered vehicle market globally through developing and making an e-axle traction motor that combines an EV’s gear, motor and power-control electronics.

In January, however, the Kyoto-based manufacturer had slashed its operating profit estimate for the year that ended March 31 by nearly a fifth to 180 billion yen, warning of uncertainty in demand and intensifying price competition in China’s EV market.

Nidec’s operating profit for the year to March 2024 rose 63.1% to 163.1 billion yen, well below the January estimate.

For the current business year to March 2025, Nidec expects operating profit to grow 41% from a year earlier to 230 billion yen, although the outlook is still below an average estimate of a 242.93 billion yen profit by 18 analysts.

‘Powerful recovery’

“Signs of recovery in demand for IT-related equipment is gradually coming into sight,” Nidec said in its financial statement.

“In addition, new business opportunities such as water-cooling modules are emerging with the increase of demand for data centers in the fields of generative AI.”

Iwai Cosmo Securities analyst Kazuyoshi Saito said Nidec’s profit growth forecast of more than 40%, substantial though it is, is unlikely to prompt investors to chase the company’s shares sharply higher.

“The company plans a powerful recovery. So it’s not negative, but a robust rise in its share price seems hard to come by,” Saito said, citing a slowdown in EV demand.

Ahead of the announcement, shares of Nidec closed down 0.25%, underperforming the benchmark Nikkei average, which gained 0.3%. But the stock has still gained about 18% so far this year.

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