<p>Japanese conglomerate Toshiba on Friday said full-year net profit fell by more than a third due partly to weak sales in electronic devices and other one-off factors.</p>.<p>It also said a planned takeover bid process that is expected to take the company private will likely start in late July.</p>.<p>For the year that ended March, the engineering giant booked a 126.57 billion yen ($940 million) net profit, down 35 per cent on-year, on sales of 3.36 trillion yen, up 0.7 per cent.<br /><br />Operating profit dropped 30.4 per cent to 110.55 billion yen, mainly because of a contraction of the hard disk drive market, and other one-off factors, Toshiba said.</p>.<p>For the current financial year to March 2024, it forecasts a 110 billion yen operating profit, down 0.5 per cent from the previous year, on sales of 3.2 trillion yen, down 4.8 per cent.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/tesla-to-recall-over-1-million-foreign-and-china-made-cars-chinese-regulator-1218079.html" target="_blank">Tesla to recall over 1 million foreign and China-made cars: Chinese regulator</a></strong></p>.<p>It did not provide a forecast for full-year net profit.</p>.<p>In 2018, Toshiba sold its prized chip unit Toshiba Memory to a group led by US investor Bain Capital.</p>.<p>Toshiba retains a 40 per cent stake in the chip business, which was renamed Kioxia.</p>.<p>In March, Toshiba approved a $15 billion takeover bid by a consortium led by investment fund Japan Industrial Partners.</p>.<p>If the acquisition is successful, it will take the engineering giant private.</p>.<p>The long-awaited move follows years of turmoil for the company, which once symbolised Japan's tech prowess but has more recently faced scandals, financial trouble and high-level resignations.</p>.<p>The JIP-led consortium includes 17 Japanese businesses and six Japanese financial institutions, which are investing in or issuing loans for the deal.</p>.<p>Toshiba, which produces everything from rice cookers to medical equipment and nuclear plants, has been rocked by turbulence since 2015 when a profit-padding scandal erupted.</p>.<p>That led to huge losses, followed by a recovery that brought pressure from new activist shareholders.</p>.<p>Foreign investors have kept Toshiba afloat, but have also pushed for faster growth and a clearer long-term strategy.</p>.<p>In April last year, the firm said it was suspending a plan to split in two after a shareholder vote against the idea and would weigh going private.</p>
<p>Japanese conglomerate Toshiba on Friday said full-year net profit fell by more than a third due partly to weak sales in electronic devices and other one-off factors.</p>.<p>It also said a planned takeover bid process that is expected to take the company private will likely start in late July.</p>.<p>For the year that ended March, the engineering giant booked a 126.57 billion yen ($940 million) net profit, down 35 per cent on-year, on sales of 3.36 trillion yen, up 0.7 per cent.<br /><br />Operating profit dropped 30.4 per cent to 110.55 billion yen, mainly because of a contraction of the hard disk drive market, and other one-off factors, Toshiba said.</p>.<p>For the current financial year to March 2024, it forecasts a 110 billion yen operating profit, down 0.5 per cent from the previous year, on sales of 3.2 trillion yen, down 4.8 per cent.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/tesla-to-recall-over-1-million-foreign-and-china-made-cars-chinese-regulator-1218079.html" target="_blank">Tesla to recall over 1 million foreign and China-made cars: Chinese regulator</a></strong></p>.<p>It did not provide a forecast for full-year net profit.</p>.<p>In 2018, Toshiba sold its prized chip unit Toshiba Memory to a group led by US investor Bain Capital.</p>.<p>Toshiba retains a 40 per cent stake in the chip business, which was renamed Kioxia.</p>.<p>In March, Toshiba approved a $15 billion takeover bid by a consortium led by investment fund Japan Industrial Partners.</p>.<p>If the acquisition is successful, it will take the engineering giant private.</p>.<p>The long-awaited move follows years of turmoil for the company, which once symbolised Japan's tech prowess but has more recently faced scandals, financial trouble and high-level resignations.</p>.<p>The JIP-led consortium includes 17 Japanese businesses and six Japanese financial institutions, which are investing in or issuing loans for the deal.</p>.<p>Toshiba, which produces everything from rice cookers to medical equipment and nuclear plants, has been rocked by turbulence since 2015 when a profit-padding scandal erupted.</p>.<p>That led to huge losses, followed by a recovery that brought pressure from new activist shareholders.</p>.<p>Foreign investors have kept Toshiba afloat, but have also pushed for faster growth and a clearer long-term strategy.</p>.<p>In April last year, the firm said it was suspending a plan to split in two after a shareholder vote against the idea and would weigh going private.</p>