Japan Display seeks $900 million for new OLED production
method, shares soar
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[October 04, 2017]
By Makiko Yamazaki
TOKYO (Reuters) - A Japan Display Inc group
firm aims to raise $900 million to mass produce OLED panels using new
technology that will slash costs, a source familiar with the matter said
- plans that sent shares in the Apple Inc supplier surging 24 percent.
Display makers are looking at mass producing organic light-emitting
diode screens with a lower-cost printing process and if Japan Display
was first, that could help it catch up with South Korean rivals after
long being a laggard in OLED technology.
Its affiliate, JOLED, which is majority owned by a state-backed fund,
has been working towards using the technology to start mass production
of medium-sized screens for medical equipment monitors in late 2018 or
early 2019.
JOLED has now approached dozens of investors including Sony Corp and
Canon Inc for funds, the Nikkei business daily reported on Wednesday.
Japan Display said in a statement the reported details were not
something it had announced, but added that it was considering ways to
utilize its domestic factories to mass produce OLED panels.
The source, who was not authorized to speak on the matter, declined to
be identified.
OLED screens are gaining in popularity as they are generally thinner,
more flexible and offer richer colors than liquid crystal display (LCD)
panels. Apple has adopted an OLED screen for its new iPhone X. But high
production costs are still keeping OLED screens from being used widely.
Bigger rivals Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and LG Display Co Ltd are also
working on the new production technology but it is not clear who is in
the lead.
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Japan Display Inc's high resolution panel for mobile is displayed at
its headquarters in Tokyo, Japan, August 9, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
Hiroshi Hayase, senior director at research firm IHS, said the printing method
should result in products 30 to 40 percent cheaper than those made by the
current evaporation method.
If it could be used to make large panels such as TV screens, that would be a
major breakthrough for the industry as it could eliminate the color filters that
are currently necessary.
"JOLED has taken a key step forward," said Hayase. "It now seems a matter of
investment," he added.
For large panels, JOLED said it plans to license the printing technology to
electronics makers willing to launch a production line.
Shares in Japan Display rocketed higher on the news it was seeking funds, which
was first reported by the Nikkei, and they closed up 24 percent to give the firm
a market value of $1.5 billion.
Japan Display also has separate plans to use the evaporation method to
mass-produce smaller screens for smartphones from 2019 and is considering
tapping new investors to fund that move.
Japan Display currently holds 15 percent of JOLED, but plans to take a majority
stake. Sony Corp and Panasonic Corp each own 5 percent.
($1 = 112.5700 yen)
(Reporting by Makiko Yamzaki; Additional reporting by Chang-Ran Kim and Miyoung
Kim; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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