Panasonic Boosts Battery Unit Outlook, Unveils Profitability Reform Plan

Panasonic Holdings has raised its full-year earnings forecast for its energy division, which supplies batteries to Tesla, citing strong sales of energy storage systems and improved profitability at its U.S. battery plant. The revised outlook increases the segment’s expected earnings by 14% to 124 billion yen ($798.35 million), following a 39% rise in operating profit during the third quarter.

The company also announced a new management reform plan, aiming to boost group profitability by over 300 billion yen ($1.93 billion) and achieve a return on equity above 10% by the fiscal year ending March 2029. It plans to improve profitability by 150 billion yen by fiscal 2026 and another 150 billion yen by fiscal 2028.

Panasonic’s energy unit benefited from higher sales of energy storage systems and lower material costs, offsetting an overall decline in automotive battery sales. Reduced production in Japan and increased costs related to a new U.S. battery plant and a renovated facility in Japan’s Wakayama prefecture impacted operations.

Expanding its North American footprint, Panasonic Energy currently operates a battery plant in Nevada supplying Tesla and is set to open a second U.S. facility in Kansas this year. The segment reported third-quarter operating income of 42 billion yen ($270.46 million).

Despite industry-wide concerns over slowing EV demand, Panasonic has retained its full-year profit forecast of 380 billion yen for the entire group. It continues to compete with major Asian battery makers, including China’s CATL and South Korea’s LG Energy Solution, the latter of which recently announced plans to cut capital expenditure by up to 30% due to weakening EV demand.