Oct 30 (Nikkei) - Tokyo Disney Resort is expected to keep capacity limits into the new year as its operator tracks toward an annual net loss for the first time with attendance limited amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Oriental Land, the resort operator, warned Thursday that it will likely post a consolidated net loss of 51.1 billion yen ($489.8 million) for the year ending next March. Tokyo Disney Resort now takes in roughly 35,000 visitors a day, which is about 40% of pre-coronavirus levels.
"It will take time to restore the visitor count," Akiyoshi Yokota, an executive director at Oriental Land, told reporters Thursday.
The resort, which includes Tokyo Disneyland and DisneySea, first shut down attractions at the end of February due to the virus. It later reopened in July, following industry guidelines to cap visitor traffic at half the normal volume.
Oriental Land plans to steadily lift traffic to around the 50% threshold in the second half of the fiscal year. The visitor count will be maintained at that level in the next financial year if there is no change to the guidelines.
With no adjustment to its earning structure, the resort needs to bring customer traffic to about 60% of normal to turn a profit. In the meantime, Oriental Land decided to cut fixed costs and other overhead by 50 billion yen groupwide this fiscal year.
Executive compensation through the end of the current financial year will be cut further as well. Oriental Land announced in June it would cut compensation to representative directors by 30%. That reduction will be extended by another 60%. Nonrepresentative directors will take a further 55% cut on top of a 20% cut.
Labor costs and expenses associated with events and advertising will also be on the chopping block. The annual dividend per share will decrease by 18 yen to 26 yen.
Oriental Land forecasts that sales will plunge 60% to 185.4 billion yen. An operating loss of 51.4 billion yen is also anticipated, down from a 96.8 billion yen profit from a year earlier. Fiscal 2019's bottom line was 62.2 billion yen in the black.













