Japanese gaming company Nintendo plans to sell its majority stake in the US baseball team, Seattle Mariners.
A statement
said it had begun talks to sell "a portion of its ownership". Once a
deal is done, Nintendo will no longer be the team's principal owner.
It has struggled to repair its finances in the face of competition from mobile gaming. On Wednesday it released a 60% net profit drop for the past year.
Nintendo took over the team in 1992 when it was at risk of being relocated.
The
president at the time, Hiroshi Yamauchi, then pushed the investment so
it could become the principal owner of the Mariners. Since then, the
baseball team has had several star Japanese players including Ichiro
Suzuki and Hisashi Iwakuma.
Nintendo's ownership also helped boost the team's popularity among Japanese baseball fans.
Profits
from the planned Seattle Mariners sale were not reflected in
Wednesday's weak financial forecasts and the firm said that they would
"adjust the financial forecasts and release them as needed" once a deal
was agreed.
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