I see you edited it from $18 loss to $18 profit. Here's Sony's CEO saying that the
PS4 hardware was profitable shortly after release.The PS3 was an exception, I doubt Sony will be making that mistake again, but even that was a long way away from a £550 loss according to your £1k+ figure.
Well '£18 profit' isn't a profit is it.. An item produced also has to earn the company enough money on an individual level so that it goes towards covering all their costs otherwise they're not making a profit! Yes it's a profit on paper which is what Sony's CEO said but then surely when you factor in the initial R&D, then the manufacturing, also the distribution , the labour and marketing costs (£Millions) as 'a poster put' £ 18 isn't actually a profit is it! They would have been running with heavy deficit of £Millions from the get go and not covering their costs with each console surely. Fortunately they're a massive company so that they have their lots and lots of financial resources behind them.
Also without looking at stats I reckon all the console releases from PS1 onwards were initially sold at a loss, I've read many times that consoles initially lose money.
I've just read : Sony has confirmed that the
PS4 was
sold at a loss at launch. Now how long before this '£18' was factored in which I spoke on I haven't looked ; we're looking at the initial launch of the PS5 so historically it will be sold absolutely at a loss.
Just read this which just reiterates my reasoning: "
Sony's PS4, which launched at $399, cost $381 to make. After factoring in marketing, shipping, and other operating costs, Microsoft and
Sony likely lost money on each console sold."
I would say highly likely!
I just read your link : it says this: Sony ended its fiscal year( which was the launch year)of the PS4 with a net loss of $1.26 billion.