Toshiba shares fell 20% on Wednesday
after the firm warned that its US nuclear business may be worth less
than previously thought.
The slump was large enough for trading in stocks of the Japanese industrial giant to be automatically halted.
Shares had already fallen 12% on Tuesday, after reports of the likely write-down began circulating.
Toshiba said the possible heavy one-off loss was linked to a deal done by a US subsidiary, Westinghouse Electric.
Westinghouse
bought the nuclear construction and services business from Chicago
Bridge & Iron in 2015. But there is now a dispute over the costs of
the deal and the value of the assets it took on.
Toshiba President Satoshi Tsunakawa apologised for "causing concern".
Slimming down
The
news is a blow for the firm's corporate reputation, which is still
struggling to recover after it emerged profits had been overstated for
years - prompting the chief executive to resign.
Since then, Toshiba has been trying to slim down the business, including selling its medical devices operations to Canon.
But
while the share price slump is a blow for investors, 2016 has still
been a pretty good year for the firm's stocks - which had gained more
than 77% before this week's falls.
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