After a day of delays and confusion, Japan’s Toshiba Corp said yesterday it expected to book a $6.3 billion hit to its US nuclear unit, a writedown that wipes out its shareholder equity and will drag the group to a full-year loss.

Hours earlier yesterday, the battered conglomerate rattled investors by failing to release its earnings on schedule, saying initially it was ‘not ready’ and then announcing later it needed more time to probe its Westinghouse nuclear business after internal reports uncovered potential problems.

The figures eventually released were numbers that have yet to be approved by its auditor and Toshiba cautioned investors that a major revision was possible. Fully audited numbers are now not due till March 14 after the firm was granted a reprieve for its formal filing by Japanese regulators.

Toshiba also said in a statement it could push harder to raise capital, including selling a majority stake in its memory chip arm. Previously, it had sought to sell just under 20 per cent of its prize business.

“Finally now, people are starting to recognise that internal control problems, the accounting issues and governance issues are very real and no longer abstract,” said Zuhair Khan, an analyst at Jefferies in Tokyo.

“They impact the viability of the company.”

Shares in the group slid eight per cent, putting the company’s market value at 973 billion yen, less than half its value in mid-December. Just under a decade ago, the firm was worth almost five trillion yen.

It also announced the first top-level departure since the nuclear problems were uncovered in December: chairman Shigenori Shiga, a former Westinghouse boss brought in to the top role last year after a $1.3 billion accounting scandal in 2015 shook up Toshiba’s upper ranks.

Toshiba said it expected to book a 499.9 billion yen net loss for the nine months to December, and a 390 billion yen net loss for the full year.

It also ended 2016 with negative shareholder equity due to the 712.5 billion yen nuclear writedown – a charge that was first flagged in December last year.

Toshiba said it would withdraw from nuclear plant construction overseas. Reuters reported this month that Toshiba was seeking at least a partial exit from ventures in Britain and India, a blow to both countries’ nuclear plans.

In an earlier, separate statement, Toshiba outlined concerns at its Westinghouse business, the US nuclear unit bought from the UK government a decade ago.

Internal reports, Toshiba said, suggested controls at Westinghouse had been “insufficient” and it needed to look into whether senior managers at Westinghouse exerted “inappropriate pressure” during discussions over a US deal to buy the company at the heart of its cost overruns, it said.

“We judged that it would take about a month for external lawyers ... to conduct these further probes and for the independent auditors to review the results,” Toshiba said.

A source briefed on the matter said Toshiba had not been able to immediately secure the approval of its auditor, Pricewaterhouse-Coopers Aarata.

The source asked not to be identified because he is not allowed to talk the media.

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