Rakuten shares jump as mobile losses narrow


FILE PHOTO: The logo of Rakuten is pictured in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan, Aug 2, 2023. REUTERS/Miho Uranaka

TOKYO (Reuters) - Rakuten Group shares surged on Monday morning after the e-commerce giant reported narrowing losses at its cash bleeding mobile unit last week alongside assurances that it can cover its debt burden for the next financial year.

Shares jumped as much as 5.2% when markets opened, hitting 596.9 yen before shedding some gains. Japanese markets were closed on Friday for a holiday.

The April-June period was Rakuten's 12th straight quarter of losses as its mobile offering has failed to bring in the customers to cover the immense costs of building out the network.

But cost-cutting efforts appear to be bearing fruit.

A Jefferies research note published after last Thursday's earnings release credited Rakuten's roaming agreement with KDDI, one of Japan's three incumbent networks, as enabling cost improvements at the newcomer.

Rakuten has taken to publicly listing its more successful units to generate cash, listing its internet banking business - Rakuten Bank - in April and applying to list its securities business in July.

Last week, Rakuten also announced plans to consolidate its payments and points businesses and fold them into Rakuten Card, its credit card and loans unit. It left open the possibility of listing the business in the future.

Rakuten also committed to taking on no additional gross debt, instead using equity-related financing to reduce its debt burden.

The group has a total of 1.9 trillion yen ($13.11 billion) in debt, with 406 billion yen due in 2024 and a further 430 billion yen in 2025, according to Refinitiv data.

($1 = 144.9500 yen)

(Reporting by Anton Bridge; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Tech News

Bluesky finds with growth comes growing pains – and bots
How tech created a ‘recipe for loneliness’
How data shared in the cloud is aiding snow removal
Trump appoints Bo Hines to presidential council on digital assets
Do you have a friend in AI?
Japan's antitrust watchdog to find Google violated law in search case, Nikkei reports
Is tech industry already on cusp of artificial intelligence slowdown?
What does watching all those videos do to kids' brains?
How the Swedish Dungeons & Dragons inspired 'Helldivers 2'
'The Mind Twisting Quadroids' review: Help needed conquering the galaxy

Others Also Read