Consumer electronics account for a shrinking portion of income after
restructuring focused Sony on gaming and image sensors and Panasonic
on electric car batteries. But TVs remain among their best-known
products.
Staying in the TV market - particularly at the premium end - keeps
the pair relevant and ensures their brands and quality are at the
forefront when consumers shop for other electronics, they said.
Sony, for example, said it saw a strong correlation between sales
trends for its TVs and audio systems.
That makes it worth persevering in a TV market dominated by Samsung
Electronics Co Ltd and cheaper Asian rivals, with Sony and Panasonic
content to hold modest shares by focusing on high-margin,
high-definition "4K" models.
"TVs are the soul of Sony and we don't want to be without them,"
Ichiro Takagi, head of Sony's home entertainment and sound business,
told Reuters in an interview.
Investors have long speculated about Sony and Panasonic gradually
exiting TVs, reflecting Japan's declining position in the tech
sector. But analysts also said sticking it out was worthwhile as
long as they were profitable.
"Especially for Sony... If they quit TVs, there's a chance that the
Sony brand will be diminished," said Junya Ayada at Daiwa
Securities.
Sony holds 7 percent of an industry it once revolutionized with its
Trinitron technology, while Panasonic has 4 percent. South Korean
leaders Samsung and LG Electronics Inc together hold about 40
percent.
"There was a time when we were going after volume, and we totally
lost that race," said Takagi. "Even in the days of the Trinitron, we
only had a share of around 10 percent. I think 10 percent is
appropriate now."
RESTRUCTURING
Under Chief Executive Kazuo Hirai, Sony has shed thousands of jobs
and sold off its personal computer (PC) unit after several years of
losses. Hirai has not ruled out dispensing with the TV arm as well
if it fails to stay profitable.
But Takagi said an exit was now less than likely after cost cutting
helped the unit book a small operating profit in the last business
year, its first in over a decade.
Moreover, Sony - with interests ranging from its Hollywood studio to
PlayStation videogames - aims to recapture its cachet as an
entertainment-to-electronics group through increased collaboration
across the company, Takagi said.
TVs encapsulated the sound and picture technology developed by the
various businesses, he said. Sony is also aiming for a high-end
comeback in audio, earlier this year introducing a portable music
player that costs over $1000.
"Historically, TVs have been at the center," Takagi said. "When
sales rose, sales in audio and home theater rose as well. As the TV
operations recover... we'll see a rise in audio sales."
Pointing to a revival are Sony's 4K televisions. Last year, Sony
quadrupled its share of TV sales at Best Buy Co Inc, the largest
U.S. consumer electronics chain, to 12 percent by concentrating on
large, high-end models, Takagi said.
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Analyst Hisakazu Torii at DisplaySearch said Japanese TV
manufacturers had little choice but to focus on high-end models,
particularly when faced with a rival like Samsung whose smartphone
success has given it overwhelming resources.
But 4K TVs already account for nearly 40 percent of sets with
screens larger than 50 inches, meaning they were starting to lose
exclusivity, he said.
Analysts say consumers, particularly in the United States, are
increasingly opting for larger sets for their living rooms to watch
movies and live events, while opting for PCs and smartphones instead
of small bedroom TVs.
"Once 4K penetration goes beyond 70 percent, that means
commoditization and price competition," Torii said.
SMARTPHONES
Panasonic, on the other hand, has not seen a comparable upturn, and
is increasingly out-sold by previously little-known Chinese
manufacturers such as TCL Corp.
Its TV division reported seven consecutive years of loss while the
overall company turned itself around by focusing on automotive
technologies and high-margin home appliances.
But Masahiro Shinada, head of Panasonic's TV business, said
maintaining a presence in television made it easier to sell more
profitable white goods - not only by lifting the company's image,
but also winning cooperation from retailers who prefer to deal with
manufacturers of high-volume products such as TVs.
"They really open the way to selling refrigerators and washing
machines," he said.
Panasonic, like Sony, is looking to the high-end TV market for
prestige and profitability. But as consumers increasingly watch
content on the go, there is a risk of TVs losing their status as
brand-defining devices.
"Your kids' cellphones are Samsung, those kids become young adults,
those young adults become adults," said Mark Sasicki, TV buyer at
Abt Electronics - the largest single-store retailer in the United
States, spread over 37 acres of a Chicago suburb. "It plays into
their appliance business."
(Additional reporting by Nathan Layne in CHICAGO; Editing by
Christopher Cushing)
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