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Forums - Nintendo - Nintendo Stock Rises Due To Wii U revenue

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Nintendo Co. rose the most in almost four months in Osaka trading after its new Wii U home video-game console generated more revenue in the U.S. than its predecessor.

The stock climbed 5.6 percent to close at 9,070 yen, posting its biggest gain since Sept. 18.

The Wii U machine features a 6.2-inch touch-screen controller that lets users wirelessly connect to the console and shift the display between a TV and the device. Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg

An attendee tries a game on a Nintendo Co. 3DS LL handheld game player at the Tokyo Game Show 2012 in Chiba, Japan. Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg

Sales of the new console in the U.S. in the first 41 days after its Nov. 18 introduction were more than $300 million, while those of the original Wii were $270 million at the same point after release, the company said in an e-mailed statement. Nintendo has sold almost 890,000 units of the Wii U in the U.S., according to market researcher NPD Group Inc.

“The U.S. sales report prompted investors to jump on Nintendo,” said Makoto Sengoku, a Tokyo-based market analyst at Tokai Tokyo Securities Co. Still, “the gain may be short-lived unless it can sustain sales momentum.”

President Satoru Iwata is counting on the Wii U to revive earnings after Kyoto, Japan-based Nintendo posted its first annual loss in three decades last year. The video-game industry in the U.S. has been shrinking as consumers buy fewer packaged titles and shift to digital downloads and games played on mobile devices.

The Wii U machine features a 6.2-inch touch-screen controller that lets users wirelessly connect to the console and shift the display between a TV and the device.

The $350 deluxe version of the console, which has more storage, and the “New Super Mario Bros. U” software attracted demand from customers, Scott Moffitt, Nintendo of America’s executive vice president of sales and marketing, said. The basic version sells in the U.S. for $300.

Japan, Americas

The creator of Mario and Zelda characters sold 638,339 Wii Us in Japan as of Dec. 30, Enterbrain, a Tokyo-based market researcher, said Jan. 7. Japan and the Americas made up 70 percent of sales in the six months ended Sept. 30, according to Nintendo. The Wii U debuted in Japan on Dec. 8.

U.S. retail sales of video-game software, hardware and accessories declined 22 percent from a year earlier to $3.21 billion in December, according to NPD. Software sales fell 26 percent to $1.54 billion, leading the overall decline, the Port Washington, New York-based company said. Console sales fell 20 percent to $1.07 billion, and retail sales for the year fell 22 percent to $13.3 billion, NPD said.

Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) held the lead in console unit sales in December for the 24th consecutive month. The Redmond, Washington-based company said in a separate statement that U.S. retailers sold 1.4 million of its Xbox consoles last month.



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I love the stock market. Nintendo announces a successor to one of its most successful franchises - stock goes down 2%. Nintendo spins the lower sales of the WiiU compared to the Wii into a higher revenue - stock goes up 6% :D



It does print money afterall.



Well at last some good information...I hope it will rise more when Nintendo announce some first-party games...
Nonetheless their stock took a huge downfall since september...



The stock market is a guessing game based on how people FEEL at any given moment. It's based on emotion which makes it kind of fascinating because it's a measure of people's reactions.

If they would make an HD remake of the first 3 Castlevania's with updated graphics the stock would rise Thricehundred percent!



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pezus said:
"Profit"?? They said themselves that they lose on every WiiU sold. Man, the stock market is weird


They are really going to lose money on Wii u in NA. Even then all it takes is one game sale to make a profit. In Europe and Japan it should be all profit. 



biggamejames79 said:
The stock market is a guessing game based on how people FEEL at any given moment. It's based on emotion which makes it kind of fascinating because it's a measure of people's reactions.

If they would make an HD remake of the first 3 Castlevania's with updated graphics the stock would rise Thricehundred percent!

I don't think so. Stock owners would think they ran out of ideas and had to reuse their old franchise -> stock down

Just like in Nintendo's case this week



Well, that's good at least. It had been falling for quite a few days now, was expecting it to go up after the Pokemon announcement but nothing.

It's still lower than it was 4 days ago, but an increase of 5% is good news nonetheless.



pezus said:
"Profit"?? They said themselves that they lose on every WiiU sold. Man, the stock market is weird


Oddly, the stock market seems to reward companies more for earning revenues than taking profits.

See: Amazon's 347819238.4 P/E ratio.



"The worst part about these reviews is they are [subjective]--and their scores often depend on how drunk you got the media at a Street Fighter event."  — Mona Hamilton, Capcom Senior VP of Marketing
*Image indefinitely borrowed from BrainBoxLtd without his consent.

Investors are (mostly) not gamers. They react to sales and mainstream hype. They have no idea what games are a big deal or what sales will be. If you are into games - and don't get too emotionally involved - there is potential to be ahead of the curve and make some money buying and selling.