
Nintendo forecasts 15 million Switch 2 sales in 2025-26
While Nintendo is diversifying into theme parks and hit movies, around 90 percent of its revenue still comes from the Switch business, analysts say.
However the unit sales forecast is more conservative than the 16.8 million expected in a survey of Bloomberg economists.
The Switch, a handheld and TV-compatible device that became a must-have gadget during pandemic lockdowns, has sold around 150 million units since its launch in 2017.
For the financial year that ended on March 31, Nintendo reported a 43.2 percent fall in full-year net profit to 278.8 billion yen ($1.9 billion), as gamers wait to splash their cash on the Switch 2.
Nintendo forecast a net profit of 300 billion yen for the current financial year but warned that US trade tariffs could impact its earnings.
"Changes to tariff rates may affect our financial forecast. We will continue to monitor the situation to respond to changes in market conditions," it said.
The company last month revealed details about the Switch 2, a hybrid console like its predecessor.
However the price has raised eyebrows at over a third more than the original Switch in major markets including the United States, where it will cost $449.99.
A Japanese-only version for domestic consumers will cost 49,980 yen ($350).
Nintendo delayed pre-orders for the Switch 2 in the United States by several weeks as it assessed the fallout from President Donald Trump's trade levies.
But last month it boasted of higher-than-expected demand in Japan for pre-orders of the new console.
Ahead of Thursday's earnings release, Atul Goyal of Jefferies said "we expect demand to significantly exceed supplies" of the Switch 2.
Recent news that the next title in the Grand Theft Auto video game series had been postponed to May 2026 is also a positive for Nintendo, Goyal said.
"GTA6 does not have a direct impact on Nintendo, but it sure makes Nintendo's competition far less intense" in terms of game launches, he wrote in a note.
© 2025 AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
In US capital, Trump tariffs bite into restaurant profits
A stone's throw from the White House, a restaurant group that takes pride in dishing up fresh local meat and produce has found itself having to raise prices on its menus. "The reality is, we have to pass along some of those to our guests," said John Filkins, corporate beverage director at Clyde's Restaurant Group. "Could be anywhere from 50 cents to $1 on certain wines by the glass, or spirits, or some of our food menu items," he told AFP. "We've seen huge increases in coffee and in teas, and we're beginning to see some of those increases in food, as well as paper products coming on through as well," he added. Clyde's, which opened in the 1960s in Washington, has more than a dozen restaurants in and around the US capital. One of them is The Hamilton in downtown Washington, where drinks prices have ticked up. While management has tried to limit increases, Filkins said this has been tough. Businesses have encountered snarled supply chains and higher costs since Trump imposed fresh tariffs after returning to the presidency in January. In April, the president unleashed his widest-ranging salvo, a 10 percent duty on imports from most trading partners. This is expected to surge to higher levels for dozens of economies. 'Low cash, low margin' Leaders like Filkins are eyeing a deadline next Wednesday when the steeper tariffs are due to kick in. These are customized to each partner, with the level for European Union products rising to 20 percent and that for Japanese goods jumping to 24 percent unless they strike deals to avert or lower the rates. Filkins warned that the longer tariffs remain in place, the fewer small, independent distributors, importers and restaurants there might be. "The hope is we don't see tariffs to the extent where we're seeing them any longer," he added. "Restaurants are, at the end of the day, typically low cash, low margin," Filkins said. A typical outfit probably runs "in the single digits in terms of profit margin," he noted. This means that cutting out 10 percent to 15 percent of their profit for wine by the glass, for example, could prove a significant blow. 20-30% hikes Clyde's sources coffee beans from places like Brazil and Indonesia for its blends, while getting teas from India and China. "Over the course of the last probably six months, we've seen about a 20 to 30 percent increase of that cost," Filkins said. This is partly because suppliers and distributors are not only paying the 10 percent tariff but forking out more due to exchange rates. Imports from China face a 30 percent tariff currently even though Washington and Beijing have temporarily lowered tit-for-tat levies on each other's goods. Without a deal, products from Indonesia face a 32 percent duty come Wednesday, and the rate for India spikes to 26 percent. "For liquor, beer and wine, most of the wine we import comes from the EU," Filkins said, noting the impact is biggest on products from France, Italy, Spain and Portugal so far. Yet, his company is trying to hold off passing on additional costs entirely. "Consumers are not comfortable spending more in the current climate," said Filkins. The world's biggest economy has fared well after the Covid-19 pandemic, helped by a solid labor market that allowed consumers to keep spending. But economic growth has slowed alongside hiring. Economists are monitoring to see if tariffs feed more broadly into inflation this summer, and households become more selective with purchases. With Trump's approach of announcing, adjusting and halting tariffs roiling financial markets and fueling uncertainty -- forcing businesses to put investments on hold -- Filkins hopes for an easing of levies.


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
Asian stocks mixed as traders shrug at US-Vietnam trade deal
Attention was also on Washington as Republicans struggled to push Donald Trump's tax-slashing budget bill through the House of Representatives amid warnings it will inflate an already ballooning national debt. While the Vietnam agreement provided hope that other governments can reach agreements with Washington, dealers were cautious as it emerged that the country must still pay tolls of as much as 40 percent for certain exports. With less than a week left until the US president's July 9 deadline to hammer out pacts to avoid his "reciprocal" levies, just three countries have done so -- stoking worries his "Liberation Day" measures will kick in and spark fresh market turmoil. In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump wrote: "It is my Great Honor to announce that I have just made a Trade Deal with the Socialist Republic of Vietnam after speaking with To Lam, the Highly Respected General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam." He said that under the "Great Deal of Cooperation", imports of Vietnamese goods will face a 20 percent US tariff, while goods that pass through Vietnam to circumvent steeper trade barriers -- so-called "transshipping" -- will see a 40 percent tariff. The news means Hanoi will avoid paying the 46 percent tolls initially applied on the April 2 tariff blitz, though the cost of goods going into America will still surge. Hanoi traders were unimpressed, with the Vietnamese capital's stock market down in early trade. A third record close in four days for Wall Street's S&P 500 and Nasdaq also did little to lift buying sentiment elsewhere in Asia, with Hong Kong, Shanghai, Tokyo, Sydney and Wellington all falling. Singapore, Seoul, Taipei, Manila and Jakarta edged up. Trump said this week he will not push back his deadline to make more deals though he and some of his officials have said a number were in the pipeline. South Korean President Lee Jae Myung said Thursday his administration was doing its "utmost" to secure an agreement. However, he warned that "it's certainly not easy, that much is clear. And to be honest, I can't say with confidence that we'll be able to wrap everything up" by the deadline. The dollar continued to struggle as traders boosted rate cut bets after data showed the private sector unexpectedly shed jobs last month for the first time since March 2023, suggesting the labour market was slackening. The reading came a day before the much-anticipated non-farm payrolls report that is used by the Fed to guide policy. Traders widely expect the bank to cut rates twice this year but there is growing speculation that it could make three, with one possibly at the July meeting. "Payrolls is the focus (Thursday), where consensus is for a 110,000 payrolls gain and a slight lift in the unemployment rate to 4.3 percent," said National Australia Bank's Taylor Nugent. "It would take more than that to dent (policy board) members' comfort (that) the labour market is resilient enough to wait beyond July for more clarity on inflation and the outlook." Meanwhile, US Treasury yields rose amid fresh worries in the bond market over Trump's "Big, Beautiful Bill" that cuts taxes as well as spending on programmes such as Medicaid. Independent analysis suggests it will add $3 trillion to the already-colossal US debt mountain, which observers warn could deal a fresh blow to the world's top economy. Key figures at around 0230 GMT Tokyo - Nikkei 225: DOWN 0.1 percent at 39,732.63 (break) Hong Kong - Hang Seng Index: DOWN 1.1 percent at 23,948.73 Shanghai - Composite: DOWN 0.1 percent at 3,450.80 Euro/dollar: UP at $1.1808 from $1.1801 on Wednesday Pound/dollar: UP at $1.3650 from $1.3634 Dollar/yen: DOWN at 143.58 yen from 143.65 yen Euro/pound: DOWN at 86.50 pence from 86.52 pence Brent North Sea Crude: DOWN 0.9 percent at $68.48 per barrel


Fashion Network
8 hours ago
- Fashion Network
Trump's Vietnam trade deal lifts Nike, Under Armour, Levi Strauss shares
Shares of Nike and other apparel makers rose on Wednesday after U.S. President Donald Trump said he had struck a trade deal with Vietnam that would impose a lower-than-expected tariff rate on many imports from the Southeast Asian country. After months of negotiations, Trump's trade deal with Vietnam includes a 20% tariff on imports from Vietnam, lower than the initial 46% rate he had announced in April. Apparel makers have been diversifying production away from China to Vietnam, Cambodia and Indonesia, as Trump's reciprocal tariffs on imports from these countries proposed in April raised concerns over supply chain costs and higher product prices. 'Investors may be looking at this as a sign that many of the threatened tariffs (on Vietnam and other countries) will be rescinded,' Morningstar Research analyst David Swartz said. The deal also includes a 40% levy on transshipments from third countries. Trump said in a post on Truth Social that Vietnam would provide the U.S. with greater market access, with no tariffs on U.S. exports into Vietnam. Nike's shares were up nearly 3.6%, Under Armour rose 2.3%, and Levi Strauss gained 1.6%. Shares in Gap and Abercrombie & Fitch were up less than 1%. According to the company's annual filing, Vietnam manufactured about 50% of the total Nike brand footwear in fiscal 2024. North America is Nike's largest market in terms of revenue. Tariffs could add about $1 billion to its costs, but Nike expects to fully mitigate the impact over time, it said last week. Shares of electronics retailer Best Buy were up marginally. The company had factored in Trump's base tariff rate of 10% in its annual forecast in May. 'The transshipping aspect is an important wrinkle, but I'd expect suppliers will quickly move to adjust supply chains to avoid paying that hefty duty,' said Matthew McCartney, analyst at Wedbush Securities. 'Bigger picture, this deal brings clarity to the industry for a critical consumer electronics hub and eliminates some downside risk to Best Buy's outlook.' The companies — including Nike, Adidas, Puma