Picture: REUTERS
Picture: REUTERS

TOKYO — Sharp climbed for a third day in Tokyo after reports the debt-strapped display maker’s main lenders were considering forgiving loans to facilitate an investment by a government-backed investment fund.

The shares surged 14% to close at ¥150, bringing their three-day gain to 25%, the most since May 2013. The stock briefly soared on Tuesday by as much as 36%, the most since 1974, with trading volume more than eight times the three-month average. Mizuho Financial Group and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group could forgive loans to secure an investment from Innovation Network Corporation of Japan, Kyodo reported without attribution on Friday.

Sharp has endured more than ¥1.2-trillion ($9.8bn) in losses over the past four financial years after lower-cost South Korean and Chinese rivals undercut its core business making liquid crystal-display televisions. The company remains dependent on its main lenders for survival, even after the banks accepted shares in the company in exchange for debt.

"Individual investors are buying Sharp to get short-term profit," SBI Asset Management Company chief investment officer Yasuaki Kogure said. "Even if banks forgive loans, it won’t be a fundamental solution."

Sharp’s years of losses has seen many institutional investors abandon the stock. All but one of the 14 analysts tracked by Bloomberg recommend selling the shares, with the other rating being a neutral.

The maker of displays for mobile phones, tablets and televisions is considering selling a stake in the LCD operation to the government-backed INCJ or to Foxconn Technology Group unit Hon Hai Precision Industry Company, people with knowledge of discussions within the companies have said.

Sharp said on October 30 that its sales dropped 3.6% in the fiscal first half to ¥1.279-trillion as revenue from LCD TVs, tablets and solar batteries all decreased.

Japan’s Rating and Investment Information has a B-rating on Sharp, six levels below investment grade. The ratings company evaluated the company at AA as recently as May 2009.

Foxconn, assembler of Apple’s iPhone, has signed a letter of intent to buy a stake in Sharp’s liquid-crystal display business in a deal that would give the Taiwan-based company management control, people familiar with the plan said in September.

Sharp President Kozo Takahashi is struggling under rising debt and has announced plans to sell the company’s headquarters, withdraw from the TV business in North America and cut back in solar panel manufacturing.

Bloomberg