Toshiba said yesterday it is selling its entire 65 percent stake in Toshiba Medical Finance Co to Canon, a Japanese camera maker, effective March 31. Tokyo-based Toshiba has been in talks with Canon since late last year on the sale.
Toshiba, which owns US nuclear company Westinghouse, is in deep trouble after suffering massive losses in its nuclear business. It has been selling off lucrative businesses such as its computer-chip operations.
It is projecting a 712.5 billion yen (USD 6.3 billion) loss for its nuclear business, and has been unable to report April-December financial results. Its chairman has resigned to take responsibility for the mess.
It has also sold its household appliance unit to Midea of China, which is maintaining the Toshiba brand name. The company has said it will no longer take on new reactor construction projects and will focus on maintaining the reactors it already has.
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Toshiba is also involved in the decommissioning of Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, which suffered multiple meltdowns after a massive March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
Its costs have risen because of growing safety concerns and regulations after the Fukushima accident, adding to Toshiba's woes.