This is a look at the companies that manufacture the components of the Nintendo Switch, some are doing fine, while others are not okay.
If you are wondering about the relevance of this, then take a look at Renesas and how the failure of the Wii U affected them.
The date in the thread title is relative to Nintendo's financial year ending in March 2018.
Japan Display Inc. (JDI)
References: https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Co...aces-rocky-road-even-with-new-turnaround-plan
JDI are the sole manufacturer of Nintendo Switch's LCD screen, they posted their results for the April-June quarter recently and booked a net loss of ¥31.5B ($286M). They are laying off 3700 workers or 30% of their workforce to reduce fixed costs by ¥50B ($454M), doing so will restructure their plant operations in Japan while increasing their operations done via outsourcing.
The company will be expecting its 4th year of losses in a row, anticipating a net loss of ¥200B (~$1.8B). JDI will be looking to partner with an overseas technology company to boost investment capital due to their poor performance.
JDI has relied on INCJ, a government-backed corporation that has given capital investment to keep the company afloat but with JDI falling behind in capabilities to mass produce OLED screens, they have are losing sales to LG and Samsung as Apple will be changing from JDI to its rivals for manufacturing OLED screens for the yet to be revealed iPhone 8 model.
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Toshiba
References: https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/T...a-court-essentially-gets-out-of-Toshiba-s-way
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/T...ry-saga-drags-on-amid-debate-on-SK-Hynix-role
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/T...r-to-sign-off-on-fiscal-2016-earnings-in-part
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/T...-investment-aimed-at-gaining-edge-in-chip-row
Toshiba is a mess to go over explaining. First, they are one of the suppliers that Nintendo used for NAND flash memory chips, the other being Samsung.
Toshiba has ¥600B ($5.43B) in losses associated with Waterhouse Electric thanks to purchasing a nuclear power plant construction company in the US. Toshiba are trying to sell their Memory Chip business for around ¥2T because the losses from their nuclear investment could accumulate up to ¥1T.
Toshiba, has a complicated relationship with Western Digital. Western Digital owns SanDisk who share a chip fabrication plant with Toshiba in Japan. WD claims that they are entitled to a stake in Toshiba's memory chip business due to a joint venture agreement regarding the above chip plant. Even though Western Digital brought forward a bid for the Toshiba Memory Chip unit, Toshiba selected a conglomerate of Japanese financial firms along with SK Hynix which is confusing because SK Hynix wants a stake and they are a South Korean company whereas Toshiba wanted to keep its technology safe in Japan away from foreign rivals.
Western Digital are cock-blocking Toshiba from going through with their sale by seeking an injunction through court. A California court recently decided they wouldn't grant WD's request for injunction so the matter has now been taken to the International Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce. The matter might not even be settled before March 2018 where Toshiba needs to make this sale to deal with their debt otherwise they'll be delisted from the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
___
Samsung
References: http://asia.nikkei.com/Business/AC/Samsung-plans-18bn-chip-investment-as-Toshiba-founders
https://asia.nikkei.com/Markets/Equities/Underlying-trends-cast-doubt-on-chip-boom-s-longevity
https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/08/07/business/samsung-trial-lee.html
Samsung is the other supplier of NAND flash memory chips for the Nintendo Switch. Samsung is investing $18B to increase production of their NAND flash memory chips, they recently completed a new fabrication plant that makes 64-layer 3D NAND chips which can provide higher storage and manufacture more chips per wafer compared to the 2D planar method.
It is important to highlight since NAND flash memory chip supplies are scarce not only due to its use in Smartphones but it has been exacerbated by companies investing in IoT which need NAND chips in servers for data centres.
Despite scandals related to the company where Samsung's vice chairman may be sentenced to 12 years prison for bribery with South Korean government officials, the company achieved one of its strongest quarters ever with a profit of approximately $10 billion.
___
Alps Electric
References:
http://m.neogaf.com/showthread.php?t=1334244
http://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Tre...ts-makers-flying-high-on-smartphone-tailwinds
http://www.alps.com/pdf/ir/disclosure/2018apx1_e.pdf
Alps Electric manufactures the HD Rumble for the Nintendo Switch using its product known as the Haptic Reactor. (Check the neogaf reference for more information.)
There is no known shortage of Linear Resonant Actuators as Alps Electric cited during their recent earnings that sales of their Haptic products increased significantly for the quarter.
They are not in any trouble financially like JDI or Toshiba since Alps Electric posted a net profit of ¥6.3B for the first quarter FY3/2018.
____
Minebea Mitsumi
References: https://asia.nikkei.com/Markets/Tok...sumi-s-Q1-profit-seen-beating-market-estimate
https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Deals/Minebea-Mitsumi-aim-to-become-more-than-sum-of-their-parts
(And other references linked in keywords below.)
Have you heard of Mitsumi Electric? Have you heard of Minebea? Then you probably haven't heard of those two companies that ended up merging into Minebea Mitsumi. What do they manufacture for the Nintendo Switch? I don't know. I can confirm that they are involved.
First, we'll go through their past histories. Before the merger, Mitsumi Electric was an electronic components manufacturer and they had only one big client, and that client was Nintendo.
According to this Wiki article, Mitsumi Electric manufactured Nintendo's console controllers from the NES to the Wii. Apparently they were involved in some capacity with Wii U hardware.
There is documentation that shows Nintendo is Mitsumi Electric's major customer. More past documentation can be found here.
What about Minebea? Before the merger, Minebea is known for manufacturing ball bearings and for having around 70% to 80% of market share in LED backlights. Surprisingly they have worked with Nintendo before, they made strain gauge force sensors which were used in the Wii Balance Board that let you play games like Wii Fit.
Onto the present, they've merged into Minebea Mitsumi. They've been making stuff for the Nintendo Switch but we don't know what, I've looked through their recent presentations and Q&A sessions, looking at their products, it is possible that they make the AC Adapters and USB Type-C connectors for the Nintendo Switch. But I don't know since I can't prove that. They do manufacture those things though. The LED backlights used in the Switch could be from them too since they have the largest market share in LED backlights anyway.
I looked through their last three quarters for presentations and Q&A sessions here and here. They haven't put up the Q&A for the latest quarter but the previous ones will tell you that they do work on the Switch and that they can't disclose what they do due to confidentiality agreements.
http://www.minebeamitsumi.com/engli...sure/presentation/p2017/p2017_qa04/index.html
The following question mentions confidentiality agreements.
http://www.minebeamitsumi.com/engli...sure/presentation/p2017/p2017_qa03/index.html
The following question is about seasonal factors regarding demand for game consoles.
The following question mentions new game consoles helped turn around their operating income.
The following question, a Mitsumi representative mentions they employ a wide range of technologies in game consoles which makes it hard to pinpoint what they manufacture for the Nintendo Switch.
The following question regarding inventory of products confirmed a new game console that launches in March, obviously that would have been the Nintendo Switch.
We still don't know what it is that they made for the Nintendo Switch though:
That's all the information I have on Minebea Mitsumi, in their recent quarter they made a net profit of ¥14,181 (millions of yen) which should be $130 million if the conversion was correct.
____
I would add Nvidia but I don't know if they or Nintendo handle giving the orders to TSMC to manufacture the SoC for the Nintendo Switch. Nvidia will be releasing their quarterly earnings this week where we can see how much of their Tegra chips have sold. We know they separate the sales of Tegra chips from gaming and automotive so we can know how much money Nvidia are making from Nintendo.
In their last quarter, Nvidia made $332 million from Tegra chips of which $140 million of that amount was from automotive so Nintendo was responsible for somewhere upto $192 million for Nvidia's sales of Tegra chips.
If you are wondering about the relevance of this, then take a look at Renesas and how the failure of the Wii U affected them.
The date in the thread title is relative to Nintendo's financial year ending in March 2018.
Japan Display Inc. (JDI)
References: https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Co...aces-rocky-road-even-with-new-turnaround-plan
JDI are the sole manufacturer of Nintendo Switch's LCD screen, they posted their results for the April-June quarter recently and booked a net loss of ¥31.5B ($286M). They are laying off 3700 workers or 30% of their workforce to reduce fixed costs by ¥50B ($454M), doing so will restructure their plant operations in Japan while increasing their operations done via outsourcing.
The company will be expecting its 4th year of losses in a row, anticipating a net loss of ¥200B (~$1.8B). JDI will be looking to partner with an overseas technology company to boost investment capital due to their poor performance.
JDI has relied on INCJ, a government-backed corporation that has given capital investment to keep the company afloat but with JDI falling behind in capabilities to mass produce OLED screens, they have are losing sales to LG and Samsung as Apple will be changing from JDI to its rivals for manufacturing OLED screens for the yet to be revealed iPhone 8 model.
___
Toshiba
References: https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/T...a-court-essentially-gets-out-of-Toshiba-s-way
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/T...ry-saga-drags-on-amid-debate-on-SK-Hynix-role
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/T...r-to-sign-off-on-fiscal-2016-earnings-in-part
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/T...-investment-aimed-at-gaining-edge-in-chip-row
Toshiba is a mess to go over explaining. First, they are one of the suppliers that Nintendo used for NAND flash memory chips, the other being Samsung.
Toshiba has ¥600B ($5.43B) in losses associated with Waterhouse Electric thanks to purchasing a nuclear power plant construction company in the US. Toshiba are trying to sell their Memory Chip business for around ¥2T because the losses from their nuclear investment could accumulate up to ¥1T.
Toshiba, has a complicated relationship with Western Digital. Western Digital owns SanDisk who share a chip fabrication plant with Toshiba in Japan. WD claims that they are entitled to a stake in Toshiba's memory chip business due to a joint venture agreement regarding the above chip plant. Even though Western Digital brought forward a bid for the Toshiba Memory Chip unit, Toshiba selected a conglomerate of Japanese financial firms along with SK Hynix which is confusing because SK Hynix wants a stake and they are a South Korean company whereas Toshiba wanted to keep its technology safe in Japan away from foreign rivals.
Western Digital are cock-blocking Toshiba from going through with their sale by seeking an injunction through court. A California court recently decided they wouldn't grant WD's request for injunction so the matter has now been taken to the International Court of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce. The matter might not even be settled before March 2018 where Toshiba needs to make this sale to deal with their debt otherwise they'll be delisted from the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
___
Samsung
References: http://asia.nikkei.com/Business/AC/Samsung-plans-18bn-chip-investment-as-Toshiba-founders
https://asia.nikkei.com/Markets/Equities/Underlying-trends-cast-doubt-on-chip-boom-s-longevity
https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/08/07/business/samsung-trial-lee.html
Samsung is the other supplier of NAND flash memory chips for the Nintendo Switch. Samsung is investing $18B to increase production of their NAND flash memory chips, they recently completed a new fabrication plant that makes 64-layer 3D NAND chips which can provide higher storage and manufacture more chips per wafer compared to the 2D planar method.
It is important to highlight since NAND flash memory chip supplies are scarce not only due to its use in Smartphones but it has been exacerbated by companies investing in IoT which need NAND chips in servers for data centres.
Despite scandals related to the company where Samsung's vice chairman may be sentenced to 12 years prison for bribery with South Korean government officials, the company achieved one of its strongest quarters ever with a profit of approximately $10 billion.
___
Alps Electric
References:
http://m.neogaf.com/showthread.php?t=1334244
http://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Tre...ts-makers-flying-high-on-smartphone-tailwinds
http://www.alps.com/pdf/ir/disclosure/2018apx1_e.pdf
Alps Electric manufactures the HD Rumble for the Nintendo Switch using its product known as the Haptic Reactor. (Check the neogaf reference for more information.)
There is no known shortage of Linear Resonant Actuators as Alps Electric cited during their recent earnings that sales of their Haptic products increased significantly for the quarter.
They are not in any trouble financially like JDI or Toshiba since Alps Electric posted a net profit of ¥6.3B for the first quarter FY3/2018.
____
Minebea Mitsumi
References: https://asia.nikkei.com/Markets/Tok...sumi-s-Q1-profit-seen-beating-market-estimate
https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Deals/Minebea-Mitsumi-aim-to-become-more-than-sum-of-their-parts
(And other references linked in keywords below.)
Have you heard of Mitsumi Electric? Have you heard of Minebea? Then you probably haven't heard of those two companies that ended up merging into Minebea Mitsumi. What do they manufacture for the Nintendo Switch? I don't know. I can confirm that they are involved.
First, we'll go through their past histories. Before the merger, Mitsumi Electric was an electronic components manufacturer and they had only one big client, and that client was Nintendo.
According to this Wiki article, Mitsumi Electric manufactured Nintendo's console controllers from the NES to the Wii. Apparently they were involved in some capacity with Wii U hardware.
There is documentation that shows Nintendo is Mitsumi Electric's major customer. More past documentation can be found here.
What about Minebea? Before the merger, Minebea is known for manufacturing ball bearings and for having around 70% to 80% of market share in LED backlights. Surprisingly they have worked with Nintendo before, they made strain gauge force sensors which were used in the Wii Balance Board that let you play games like Wii Fit.
Onto the present, they've merged into Minebea Mitsumi. They've been making stuff for the Nintendo Switch but we don't know what, I've looked through their recent presentations and Q&A sessions, looking at their products, it is possible that they make the AC Adapters and USB Type-C connectors for the Nintendo Switch. But I don't know since I can't prove that. They do manufacture those things though. The LED backlights used in the Switch could be from them too since they have the largest market share in LED backlights anyway.
I looked through their last three quarters for presentations and Q&A sessions here and here. They haven't put up the Q&A for the latest quarter but the previous ones will tell you that they do work on the Switch and that they can't disclose what they do due to confidentiality agreements.
http://www.minebeamitsumi.com/engli...sure/presentation/p2017/p2017_qa04/index.html
The following question mentions confidentiality agreements.
Q: What should we make of Mitsumi's medium-term plan? How are its top products, such as game consoles, OISs, and VCMs, factored into it?
A: While I can't give you specifics about any of these products due to confidentiality agreements, in terms of projected sales under the medium-term plan, we expect camera actuator sales to remain flat. There will be ups and downs ranging from 1 to 2 billion yen depending on the year. We also made the estimates for game consoles very conservative. Actual results for this fiscal year should be much higher.
http://www.minebeamitsumi.com/engli...sure/presentation/p2017/p2017_qa03/index.html
The following question is about seasonal factors regarding demand for game consoles.
Q: Can you tell us how production of new game consoles will affect your bottom line? You said earlier that you can expect to make a steady profit, but there should be a big seasonal factor, differing from the seasonal factor affecting the LED backlight business. Should I assume that production will remain stable throughout the year or not?
A: There's nothing we can do about seasonal demand for game consoles. Demand is sure to rise when the launch date draws near. Honestly, I can't really say that sales will remain stable throughout the year. There will probably be ups and downs. Now that we are expanding our operations, we are in a generally favorable situation where our various business operations offset each other's ups and downs.
The following question mentions new game consoles helped turn around their operating income.
Q: MITSUMI turned its operations around in the December quarter and will generate 2 billion yen in operating income in the latter two months of the March quarter. Can I assume that the improved camera actuator business is one of the factors behind this turnaround?
A: There are many factors, including new game consoles. Since we looked at asset impairment with a focus on optical devices, performance should eventually improve in this area as well. One thing for certain is that sales of optical devices will bottom out in February and March as usual, so while we expect they will generate a profit, it won't be that big.
The following question, a Mitsumi representative mentions they employ a wide range of technologies in game consoles which makes it hard to pinpoint what they manufacture for the Nintendo Switch.
Q: You estimate that MITSUMI operations will generate about 5 billion yen in operating income next fiscal year. While game consoles have not really been a focus of your business, did they generate more of a profit than you had expected or just as you projected? Or was it asset impairments that made the difference?
A: I myself had never really considered taking a close look at game consoles and you too, I'm sure, must have had some reservations about their profitability. When I took a closer look, however, I found that game consoles employ a wide range of technologies, and MITSUMI possesses those technologies. It was an interesting discovery that opened the door to different business opportunities and game consoles pointed the way. I now have a totally different idea about game consoles. That goes for semiconductors as well and I'll talk about it in more detail this May.
The following question regarding inventory of products confirmed a new game console that launches in March, obviously that would have been the Nintendo Switch.
Q: MITSUMI's inventory increased from 43.6 billion yen at the end of September to 45 billion yen at the end of December despite inventory write-downs. Why is that? Is it due to an increase in products for new game consoles?
A: They increased their inventory of products for new game consoles in December quarter. Shipments of these products will begin in March quarter.
We still don't know what it is that they made for the Nintendo Switch though:
Q: Are they work in process or raw materials? In other words, did the increased inventory affect the profit gained from better capacity utilization?
A: MITSUMI stocked up supplied parts by charge in preparation for the shipments that will begin in March quarter.
That's all the information I have on Minebea Mitsumi, in their recent quarter they made a net profit of ¥14,181 (millions of yen) which should be $130 million if the conversion was correct.
____
I would add Nvidia but I don't know if they or Nintendo handle giving the orders to TSMC to manufacture the SoC for the Nintendo Switch. Nvidia will be releasing their quarterly earnings this week where we can see how much of their Tegra chips have sold. We know they separate the sales of Tegra chips from gaming and automotive so we can know how much money Nvidia are making from Nintendo.
In their last quarter, Nvidia made $332 million from Tegra chips of which $140 million of that amount was from automotive so Nintendo was responsible for somewhere upto $192 million for Nvidia's sales of Tegra chips.