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Toshiba losses, chairman resignation could have impact on Westinghouse

TOKYO (AP) — The future of Westinghouse is unclear after new details emerge about massive financial losses by parent company Toshiba.

Toshiba Corp.'s chairman resigned Tuesday after the company logged such massive losses in its nuclear business that it must sell its lucrative computer chip business to avoid going belly up.

The company projected a 712.5 billion yen, or $6.3 billion, loss for its nuclear business related to the acquisition of CB&I Stone & Webster by its U.S. nuclear unit Westinghouse. The company also said it will not take on new projects to construct nuclear plants.

President Satoshi Tsunakawa said the company also was looking for potential partners to acquire a stake in Westinghouse, which is headquartered in Cranberry Township.

Westinghouse started to move its headquarters from Monroeville to Cranberry in 2009. The transition was completed in 2012. With more than 2,200 employees, the company is a major employer in Butler County and the largest employer in Cranberry Township.

Tuesday’s news has created concern over whether any Westinghouse employees will lose their jobs.

"We knew Westinghouse was having some financial difficulties. They are part of our community. They are part of our family here in Cranberry Township," said Cranberry Township communications director Tina Fedko. "We are very hopeful for their families and for the company. We don't know what's going to happen and they don't know yet."

Westinghouse officials said they spoke with all employees Tuesday, but would not provide details. They said, as of now, there is no impact to our area, but that could change.

Earlier Tuesday, Toshiba delayed reporting its official financial results by a month, citing auditing problems. That sent Toshiba stock tumbling 8 percent in Tokyo trading.

After the market closed, it released unaudited numbers, warning they may change "by a wide margin."

The company said Shigenori Shiga, the chairman, will step down from the board, effective Wednesday, but stay on as a Toshiba executive.

Toshiba said its net worth was in the negative, at minus 191 billion yen ($1.7 billion) by the end of last year. The company hopes to fix that by the end of March by selling its flash-memory business and other assets.

In a stunning acknowledgement, Tsunakawa told reporters the company viewed its move into the nuclear sector by acquiring Westinghouse in 2006 as a misstep that led to its present woes.

Tsunakawa bowed deeply at a news conference to apologize for "troubling investors and stakeholders."

Westinghouse's purchase in 2015 of CB&I Stone & Webster, a nuclear construction and services business, was aimed at winning more business in decontamination, decommissioning and plant projects. But it just amplified that problem.

Auditors questioned Toshiba's latest reporting on the acquisition of CB&I Stone & Webster after a whistleblower, an employee at Westinghouse, wrote a letter to the Westinghouse president.

The company said it will reorganize its nuclear business to be directly under Tsunakawa for stricter monitoring.

It will also focus on reactor maintenance, the nuclear fuel business and decommissioning of the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan, where reactors went into multiple meltdowns after the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Efficiency moves expected at CB&I Stone & Webster never played out, resulting in a huge overvaluation of the company's worth that led to the huge losses. Toshiba denied it had purposely covered up the problems.

In its preliminary results, Toshiba said it anticipates a group net loss of 500 billion yen, or $4.4 billion, for April-December of last year, including the 712.5 billion yen hit from its nuclear business.

The company is forecasting a group net loss of 390 billion yen, $3.43 billion, for the full year through March 31, instead of the 145 billion yen profit it had anticipated earlier.

Toshiba, founded in 1875, employs about 190,000 people and used to be one of the most respected brands of Japan Inc. It still has a sprawling business spanning household appliances, railways, hydrogen energy and elevator systems.

The company has been grappling in recent years with a scandal over company officials' doctoring of accounting books to meet unrealistic profit targets.

"It is so unfortunate that this has happened," said Ryoji Sato, a company director, when asked by a reporter about the company's promises to come clean. "We must keep trying to do better."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.