US billionaire Daniel Loeb who last year tried to push Sony to spin off a key part of its business, has sold his shares in the struggling firm saying "more urgency will be necessary" to get it back on track. Loeb's Third Point hedge fund failed to persuade Sony to hive off up to 20 percent of its successful US-based entertainment division, which includes a Hollywood studio and music label, to make it more profitable.
However, Sony rejected the proposal, which grabbed international headlines and was widely portrayed as a clash of corporate cultures, pitting a hard-charging foreign billionaire against one of the bedrocks of Japan's staid corporate sector.
While specifics on Third Point's interests in Sony are scant, Loeb who is known for his aggressive style in stoking change at target firms said last year that his fund held the largest stake in the firm.
Third Point said in a statement dated October 21 that despite profit warnings, a worse-than-expected electronics environment and slow macroeconomic reforms in Japan, it still generated nearly a 20 percent return on its investment.
"While, regrettably, the company rejected our partial spin-out suggestion, they made some changes that were consistent with our goals," it said, pointing to cost-cutting and improved transparency.
It added that Sony chief Kazuo Hirai's team "deserves credit for transitioning away from personal computers this year and improving television profitability in 2015. They have also improved investor transparency".
However, it said Sony still has "a long way to go and we continue to believe that more urgency will be necessary to definitively turn around the company's fortunes".
The once world-leading consumer electronics giant warned last month it would book a net loss of 230 billion yen ($2.14 billion) in the fiscal year to March - more than four times its earlier forecast - as it blamed a downturn in its mobile phone business.
The company also said it would cut the smartphones unit's global staff by 15 percent about 1,000 jobs and not pay dividends for the first time since its shares started trading in Tokyo in 1958.
Sony has cut expectations for sales in the money-losing smartphones business, which has been hit by weaker-than-expected results in emerging markets, as it battles global rivals including Samsung and Apple.
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