Sony's board members said they were surprised Hirai wanted to step down. But Hirai said he decided the timing was right to "pass the baton" to the next leadership, although the choice appeared to indicate the company's determination to stay on track, rather than shift too quickly to a younger generation of leadership. Yoshida, at 58, is one year older than Hirai.
Hirai became president and CEO in 2012, taking over from Howard Stringer, an American. He turned around an embattled Sony, which had sunk into losses as its once prized TV business lost out to rivals such as Samsung Electronics Co. of South Korea. Sony is now headed to booming profits, outpacing company targets, as its sensors are in demand for mobile devices made by rivals, including Apple.
"It excites me to hear more and more people enthuse that Sony is back again. As the company approaches a crucial juncture, when we will embark on a new mid-range plan, I consider this to be the ideal time to pass the baton of leadership to new management, for the future of Sony and also for myself to embark on a new chapter in my life," Hirai said of the company's three-year plan set to start in April.
Yoshida, who also served as executive deputy president, acknowledged he was taken aback when he learned about his new job late last year. But he promised to maintain a "sense of crisis," realize solid profits and growth to stay globally competitive. He said Sony still had a long way to go to become a top global technology company.
Hirai has had a difficult task of juggling the widespread operations of Sony, including household appliances, medical equipment and video game machines, as well as movies, financial services and music. It was hard to make sure every sector was profitable.
But Hirai always stressed the importance of Sony's roots, pointing to how Sony brought the world portable music players like the Walkman, the reel-to-reel tape recorder and other gadgets that went on to pioneer entire sectors because of what he described as an exciting emotional appeal.
Sony was founded in 1946 by Akio Morita and Masaru Ibuka as Japan was reconstructing from the destruction of World War II. Their dream had always been to climb to global success.
Also Friday, Sony reported fiscal third quarter profit of 296 billion yen ($2.7 billion), up dramatically from 19.6 billion yen the same period a year ago.
Quarterly sales rose nearly 12 percent to 2.67 trillion yen.
Sony said it fared better in semiconductors, games and network services, imaging products and home entertainment systems.
In its pictures division, global reception was favorable for "Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle," as well as on-demand TV sales for "The Crown," according to Sony.
Also helping lift results were the absence of losses that had hurt results before, such as the damage from an earthquake in Kumamoto in southwestern Japan in 2016. A favorable exchange rate also helped. A weak yen is a boon to Japanese exporters like Sony. Sony raised its net profit forecast to 480 billion yen ($4.4 billion) for the fiscal year through March, up dramatically from the 73 billion profit it recorded the previous fiscal year.
"We must stay close to creators," Yoshida said, stressing the importance of content and innovation. "That is the direction Sony must go."
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