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						Chinese group to get control of Japan Display after $2.1 
						billion bailout
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		 [April 12, 2019]   
		By Makiko Yamazaki 
 TOKYO (Reuters) - A Chinese-Taiwanese group 
		will take control of Apple Inc supplier Japan Display after pumping in 
		funds as part of a 232 billion yen ($2.1 billion) bailout plan for the 
		troubled display panel maker.
 
 The rescue comes after previous, publicly funded bailouts failed to help 
		the company cut its dependence on Apple, whose slowing iPhone sales have 
		badly hit Japan Display.
 
 The deal will make the buyers Japan Display's biggest shareholders - 
		with a 49.8 percent stake - replacing the Japanese government-backed 
		INCJ fund and effectively ending the government's efforts to keep the 
		last remaining domestic display maker out of foreign hands.
 
 The buyer group, which includes Taiwanese flat screen maker TPK Holding 
		and Chinese investment firm Harvest Group, will inject up to 80 billion 
		yen into Japan Display by buying shares and bonds.
 
 INCJ will also join the bailout by accepting a debt-to-preferred equity 
		swap totaling 75 billion yen and extending senior loans worth 77 billion 
		yen. Its stake will fall to 12.7 percent from 25.3 percent after the 
		deal.
 
		
		 
		The deal could potentially be subject to a U.S. national security review 
		at a time when Washington is stepping up its scrutiny on Chinese 
		investment in the United States.
 
 Japan Display has a subsidiary in San Jose, a U.S. business that could 
		give the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) 
		jurisdiction over the deal.
 
 Displays may not necessarily be critical technologies that are export 
		controlled, but some of Japan Display's technologies such as fingerprint 
		sensors could raise a national security concern, said Nancy Fischer and 
		Matthew Rabinowitz, partner and senior associate, respectively, at 
		U.S.-based law firm Pillsbury.
 
		
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			Japan Display Inc's Chief Executive Nobuhiro Higashiiriki attends a 
			news conference in Tokyo, Japan August 9, 2017. REUTERS/Issei Kato 
             
            
			 
NEW BEGINNINGS
 The bailout comes as sales of new iPhone models - many of which use newer 
organic light-emitting displays (OLED) - have left Japan Display's new factory 
that makes liquid crystal display (LCD) panels running at half capacity.
 
Japan Display expects to post its fifth straight year of net losses in the year 
ending this month, as disappointing sales of Apple's iPhone XR, the only model 
with LCD screens, dashed hopes for a turnaround.
 The Apple business accounted for more than half of Japan Display's revenue over 
the last four years.
 
 Under the latest deal, Japan Display and Harvest Tech, part of the buyout group, 
are planning to jointly produce OLED panels, used in top-end iPhones, Japan 
Display said.
 
 Reuters reported earlier this month that Japan Display will begin supplying OLED 
screens for the Apple Watch later this year.
 
 Japan Display was formed in 2012 by combining the LCD businesses of Hitachi Ltd, 
Toshiba Corp and Sony Corp in a deal brokered by the government.
 
 It went public in March 2014 and was worth more than 400 billion yen then. It is 
now worth 67 billion yen.
 
 (Reporting by Makiko Yamazaki and Chris Gallagher; Editing by Muralikumar 
Anantharaman)
 
				 
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