Bridgestone’s Shares Fall
Bloomberg has reported that Bridgestone Corporation shares fell by up to two per cent after the Nihon Keizai newspaper reported that the company is expecting its first decline in pretax profit in four years. Bridgestone stock fell by as much as 40 yen to 1990 yen after gaining 42 per cent during the course of the last year.
The Nihon Keizai reported that the tyre manufacturer’s pre-tax profits are likely to fall by 17 per cent to 150 billion yen (£763 million) because of an increase in the price of oil and other raw materials. The newspaper did not specify where it obtained its information. “It is based on the newspaper’s own reporting,” Bridgestone’s spokeswoman Setsuko Ozaki said, declining to comment on the report.
According to Bloomberg, Bridgestone’s 2005 sales may rise 4 per cent to 2.5 trillion yen. Bridgestone may also report a record group net income of about 140 billion yen, up 30 per cent, after changing its employee pension fund system, the Nikkei newspaper said.
Last month Bridgestone said it would raise the price of its tyres in 2005 in order to protect earning from rising raw material costs. Bridgestone and Firestone branded tyres used in passenger cars, trucks and buses will rise by between 5 per cent and 10 per cent, the Tokyo-based company said on 8 December.
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