Sony
said the move was part of the company's push to give autonomy to
its business units to accelerate decision-making and make them
more accountable for their profitability.
So far, Sony has focused on splitting off underperforming units,
but it said more autonomy for the sensors business would help it
remain competitive. Its sensor rivals include OmniVision
Technologies and Samsung Electronics.
Sensors, used in smartphones such as Apple Inc's iPhone,
have been one of the company's strongest products in the past
few years, in contrast with its TVs and smartphones which have
lagged behind those of Asian rivals.
Sony in April said it would spend 45 billion yen ($374 billion)
to bolster sensor production capacity this fiscal year on top of
a 105 billion yen investment announced in February.
The company is hoping to expand its sensors into
automobile-related products, as vehicles adopt more
sensor-enabled safety features.
(Reporting by Ritsuko Ando; Editing by Miral Fahmy)
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