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Gotta keep ’em all? Nintendo raising wages 10% to secure workforce as profit slumps

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The president of Nintendo is promising to boost wages at the Japanese video game maker despite a slight dip in profit and a lower outlook for the year to come.

President Shuntaro Furukawa said the company is raising wages for its Japanese workforce by 10 per cent as it looks to compete in a tight labour market.

“It’s important for our long-term growth to secure our workforce,” Furukawa said during an earnings call this week, according to Reuters.

Nintendo’s net profit in the first nine months of the fiscal year through March was 346 billion yen ($2.6 billion), down 5.8 per cent from 367 billion yen in the same period of the previous year.

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Nintendo, the Kyoto-based maker of Pokemon and Super Mario video games, did not provide a breakdown of quarterly numbers.Among the games selling well were “Splatoon 3,” a paint-shooting game, “Pokemon Scarlet and Violet” and “Nintendo Switch Sports.”

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Nintendo sold fewer machines compared to a year earlier, partly because a shortage in computer chips, a critical part for the console, due to disruptions from the pandemic crimped production, the company said.

Nintendo lowered its full fiscal year profit forecast to 370 billion yen ($2.8 billion), from the 400 billion yen ($3 billion) it had projected in November. Previous fiscal year profit was 477.7 billion yen.

This fiscal year’s nine-month sales totaled nearly 1.3 trillion yen ($10 billion), down 1.9 per cent from a year earlier.

Nintendo earlier was more bullish about its performance because an increase in people staying home during the pandemic boosted its sales.

That advantage is likely wearing off now that pandemic restrictions have eased and people increasingly are traveling and working outside their homes both in Japan and the rest of the world.

Nintendo expects to sell 18 million Switch consoles in the current fiscal year, down from an earlier forecast of 21 million Switch machines that was cut to 19 million machines late last year.

Cumulative Switch sales around the world have topped 122 million machines.

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Japanese exporters like Nintendo have gotten a boost in profits from the yen’s weakness against the U.S. dollar and other major currencies. That lifts the value of their overseas earnings when converted into yen.

The U.S. dollar is now trading at about 130 yen after rising to about 150 Japanese yen a few months ago.

— with files from the Associated Press

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