Looking at several different documents regarding the results of the 2018 fiscal year and the plans for the 2019 fiscal year, this is precisely what it appears to me. Sega doesn't seem terribly bothered by the loss in 2018, with sensible explanations as to what caused certain losses (like pachislot and pachinko machines facing new anti-gambling regulations in 2018, resulting in machines needing new certification, as well as R&D to explore new directions to compensate for the loss of gambling appeal), and plans for 2019 that, I think, are very reasonable. People see "down 70%!" and freak out, but most big companies have years where there's big losses, and oftentimes that one bad year sets them up for several much better years.