Should You Buy, Sell, or Hold Sony Stock on Rumors of a Chips Business Spinoff?
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Sony (SONY) is in the news following Bloomberg’s report that the Japanese electronics giant could split off its semiconductor business, Sony Semiconductor Solutions, as early as this year. The firm would offload most of its interests in the chip unit to shareholders and keep a minority stake, sources close to the situation told Bloomberg. Even so, implementation is uncertain and subject to revision. Investors should note that this development reopens an idea originally championed by activist investor Dan Loeb’s Third Point several years ago.
The possible split of Sony’s semiconductor business would represent a major strategic change. The semiconductors play an integral role in Sony’s image sensors and overall consumer electronics business, but shareholders have repeatedly contended that the division is undervalued as part of the overall conglomerate.
The timing of such a spinoff would be intended to tap explosive global chip demand and rebalance shareholder value ahead of more widespread structural changes in the electronics supply chain.
About Sony Stock
Sony (SONY) is a diversified Japanese corporation headquartered in Tokyo. Its businesses span electronics, entertainment, gaming, and financial services. Sony’s market capitalization is now $153 billion.
Shares have climbed 50% in the last 52 weeks, recently reaching an all-time high above $26. The stock is up close to 20% since the beginning of this year, well above the S&P 500 Index’s (SPY) drop of about 4% since then. This is based on investor enthusiasm for both its entertainment content and semiconductor innovation.

In terms of valuation, Sony’s forward price-earnings multiple stands at 18x and its price-sales multiple stands at 1.6x. Such numbers represent a decent premium to industry averages. However, there is an underlying chip operation that Sony could realize hidden value from by spinning off.
Sony Beats on Earnings
In its last quarter, Sony recorded net income of $2.47 billion on revenues of $29.1 billion. This exceeded Wall Street forecasts and showcased the firm's ability to execute in both hardware and content businesses.
Moving forward, Sony has published no guidance to suggest any significant downside revisions and is instead indicating that future performance continues to be strong. Future earnings will depend, however, on decisions regarding the fate of its chip unit as well as macroeconomic volatility related to supply chains and tariffs.
Critical context from Sony’s report was the sustained health of its sensor division and the rebound of PlayStation 5 hardware units. Management would not comment on speculation of a chip spinoff plan when reached by Bloomberg.
The following earnings report is due on May 14. Investors will be paying close attention to any news about the spinoff in future releases.
What Analysts Expect for Sony Stock
Analyst sentiment is modestly bullish. The 12 analysts covering Sony give it a “Strong Buy” consensus rating, and there have been no significant downgrades in the last 90 days. The rumor about spinning off the chip business can be an upgrade driver when formalized.
Sony’s median price target is $29.59, reflecting upside potential of about 17% at its current price. Though modest, this demonstrates cautious optimism as experts hold out for structural drivers to be clarified.

On the date of publication, Yiannis Zourmpanos did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here.