נשלח: 25 נובמבר 2006, 14:14
כדי שלא יעבדו עליכם: לאחר בדיקה מעמיקה של שעות רבות גיליתי שחברת SHARP ו - SONY מזמינות טלוויזיות LCD 32 אינץ מיצרנים סינים - לדוגמא טלווזיית 32 אינץ SHARP BV8E מיוצרת בסין ולא ביפן- כלומר שרפ וסוני מזמינות טלווזיות באיכות נמוכה ורכיבים זולים מיצרנים בסין ורק מדביקות את השם שלהם על הטלווזיות זוהי הטעיה של הצרכנים וזיוף המוצר. בארץ גם מייבאים את הדגמים הסינים.
הנה מקורות המידע:
http://209.85.135.104/search?q=cache:VU ... =clnk&cd=1
By QUINCY LIANG
Taiwan's Quanta Computer Inc. and Sanyo Electric Co. of Japan recently announced plans to set up a joint venture to develop, manufacture, and sell flat panel TVs under the Sanyo brand. The new company will also continue to expand upon Quanta's flat panel TV original design manufacturing (ODM) business.
The new venture is scheduled to begin operation in the third quarter of this year with an initial capitalization of under US$65 million; other details are still being worked out by the two companies.
In addition to Sanyo and Quanta, the greatest beneficiary of the tie-up is expected to be Quanta Display Inc., which will be responsible for supplying TV panels to the new venture. Quanta Display is a subsidiary of Quanta Computer and Taiwan's No. 4 supplier of thin film transistor-liquid crystal display (TFT-LCD) panels.
Sanyo is a leading provider of energy, home-appliance, and consumer electronics products. The Japanese company currently manufactures and sells about 6.5 million TV sets around the world each year, but LCD TVs only accounted for about 4.6 percent, or 300,000 units, of that total last year.
Quanta Computer is the world's largest notebook computer design and manufacturing company, producing more than 30 percent of the world's notebook PCs. The company has recently expanded into the rapidly growing flat panel TV business, focusing on ODM rather than own-brand production.
Michael Wang, CEO of Quanta Computer, stresses that the flat panel TV market is expected to enter a high-growth period with demand volume rising by 300 percent to 400 percent per year. "Quanta Computer never gives up trying to find strong growth momentum in the rapidly rising flat panel TV business," points out Wang. "We are devoting every possible effort into integrating available resources in the Quanta Group and hope flat panel TVs will be the group's core growth force in the next 10 years."
Currently, Quanta Computer's Entertainment business division is responsible for manufacturing flat panel TVs for major customers such as Acer Inc. of Taiwan, as well as for Sanyo. Last year, the company shipped about 350,000 flat panel TVs, which accounted for only about 2 percent of Quanta Computer's total revenue, compared with about 90 percent generated by notebook PCs.
Quanta's overly high production ratio of notebook PCs, industry sources analyze, has provided the impetus behind the company's recent efforts to diversify its product lines. Many institutional investors have projected that the Quanta-Sanyo flat-panel TV venture would enhance the development of both Sanyo and Quanta Computer's LCD TV business, as well as fill the TFT-LCD panel production lines at Quanta Display.
According to a local TFT-LCD panel maker, Sanyo is currently only a second-tier LCD TV brand in the global market, though the Japanese company aims to ship about 500,000 TVs this year. Sanyo's TFT-LCD panel-producing arm, the Tottori Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd., currently runs only two old-generation production lines (one is third-generation, or 3G, while the other is 4G), both of which are unsuitable for economically producing LCD TV panels.
Industry insiders disclose that the Quanta-Sanyo flat-panel TV tie-up was decided upon after a very short period of negotiations, as Sanyo has been vigorously trying to more aggressively develop its own-brand and ODM flat-panel TV businesses, while Quanta has no own-brand development project and owns an independent TFT-LCD panel manufacturing subsidiary. The two parties signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) in December 2005 for the new venture.
Quanta Display Feeling Happy
The Quanta-Sanyo tie-up is the latest, but not the only, good news for Quanta Display, though it is a second-tier TFT-LCD panel maker in Taiwan with lower profit margins than first-tier counterparts such as AU Optronics Corp. (AUO) and Chi Mei Optoelectronics Corp. (CMO).
Quanta Display also just announced that its monthly shipments of 32-inch TV panels would outstrip 100,000 units in the second quarter, thanks to increasing orders from Sharp of Japan, the company's panel-technology partner and long-term panel client.
A recent news report by the Chinese-language Economic Daily News (EDN) stated that Sharp of Japan has begun procuring 26- and 32-inch LCD TV panels from Quanta Display.
פה מודגש :
*******************************************************
That is the first time for Sharp to outsource panels from outside suppliersin the past, the company has solely relied on its own panel plant. The outsourced production is being viewed in the industry as evidence of the Japanese LCD TV maker's strong determination to further advance its market share.
With the orders placed by Sharp, Quanta is beginning to realize its strong potential in the LCD TV-panel market. Currently, Quanta's 6G panel plant has a monthly capacity of about 30,000 substrates, and the volume is expected to rise to about 45,000 units in the second quarter of 2006, and to 60,000 units by the end of the year.
Some industry insiders have forecast Sharp to acquire about 20 percent of Quanta's TV-panel capacity.
***********************************************************
Statistics compiled by DisplaySearch, a leading flat panel display (FPD) market research and consulting firm, show that Sharp was previously the No. 1 LCD TV brand in the international market for a long period, but lost its leading position to Sony in the fourth quarter of 2005. Industry analysts attribute Sharp's loss to the company's insufficient panel production capacity.
Sharp recently set the goal of defeating Sony and regaining its No. 1 position in the LCD TV market, industry sources say, and has reportedly decided to outsource all of its TV panels that measure 32 inches and smaller from outside suppliers, including Taiwan's Quanta, CMO, and AUO.
According to Ted Lu, senior vice president of Quanta Computer and the man responsible for setting up the Quanta-Sanyo joint venture, the cooperation project will outsource TV panels from Quanta Display, but will also procure panels produced by other suppliers to reduce risks. An example of this strategy can be seen in the fact that even affiliated Quanta Display supplies about only one-third of the panels Quanta Computer requires for notebook PC displays.
Optimistic
Some industry experts are optimistic about the Quanta-Sanyo flat-panel TV venture, though the sector is very competitive.
While it has been a well-known home-appliance brand for quite a while, some exporters say, Sanyo entered the LCD TV business later than other major Japanese counterparts, and the company lacks the strong support of an in-house panel supply. This is why Sanyo currently ranks only No. 10 in the global LCD TV market, with a share of about 2 percent.
With the joint venture with Quanta Display, comments David Hsieh, vice president of DisplaySearch Greater China, Sanyo has a chance to boost its share of the global LCD TV market. According to the senior market analyst, Sanyo's advantage lies mainly in the company's long-term brand image and global marketing resources, which cannot be easily matched by newcomers. When these resources are added to the strong manufacturing advantages offered by Quanta Display, including reduced manufacturing costs and sales prices, Sanyo-branded LCD TVs are expected to enjoy strong sales performance in the future, Hsieh states.
מידע נוסף: http://66.102.9.104/search?q=cache:7ZoE ... =clnk&cd=1
הנה מקורות המידע:
http://209.85.135.104/search?q=cache:VU ... =clnk&cd=1
By QUINCY LIANG
Taiwan's Quanta Computer Inc. and Sanyo Electric Co. of Japan recently announced plans to set up a joint venture to develop, manufacture, and sell flat panel TVs under the Sanyo brand. The new company will also continue to expand upon Quanta's flat panel TV original design manufacturing (ODM) business.
The new venture is scheduled to begin operation in the third quarter of this year with an initial capitalization of under US$65 million; other details are still being worked out by the two companies.
In addition to Sanyo and Quanta, the greatest beneficiary of the tie-up is expected to be Quanta Display Inc., which will be responsible for supplying TV panels to the new venture. Quanta Display is a subsidiary of Quanta Computer and Taiwan's No. 4 supplier of thin film transistor-liquid crystal display (TFT-LCD) panels.
Sanyo is a leading provider of energy, home-appliance, and consumer electronics products. The Japanese company currently manufactures and sells about 6.5 million TV sets around the world each year, but LCD TVs only accounted for about 4.6 percent, or 300,000 units, of that total last year.
Quanta Computer is the world's largest notebook computer design and manufacturing company, producing more than 30 percent of the world's notebook PCs. The company has recently expanded into the rapidly growing flat panel TV business, focusing on ODM rather than own-brand production.
Michael Wang, CEO of Quanta Computer, stresses that the flat panel TV market is expected to enter a high-growth period with demand volume rising by 300 percent to 400 percent per year. "Quanta Computer never gives up trying to find strong growth momentum in the rapidly rising flat panel TV business," points out Wang. "We are devoting every possible effort into integrating available resources in the Quanta Group and hope flat panel TVs will be the group's core growth force in the next 10 years."
Currently, Quanta Computer's Entertainment business division is responsible for manufacturing flat panel TVs for major customers such as Acer Inc. of Taiwan, as well as for Sanyo. Last year, the company shipped about 350,000 flat panel TVs, which accounted for only about 2 percent of Quanta Computer's total revenue, compared with about 90 percent generated by notebook PCs.
Quanta's overly high production ratio of notebook PCs, industry sources analyze, has provided the impetus behind the company's recent efforts to diversify its product lines. Many institutional investors have projected that the Quanta-Sanyo flat-panel TV venture would enhance the development of both Sanyo and Quanta Computer's LCD TV business, as well as fill the TFT-LCD panel production lines at Quanta Display.
According to a local TFT-LCD panel maker, Sanyo is currently only a second-tier LCD TV brand in the global market, though the Japanese company aims to ship about 500,000 TVs this year. Sanyo's TFT-LCD panel-producing arm, the Tottori Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd., currently runs only two old-generation production lines (one is third-generation, or 3G, while the other is 4G), both of which are unsuitable for economically producing LCD TV panels.
Industry insiders disclose that the Quanta-Sanyo flat-panel TV tie-up was decided upon after a very short period of negotiations, as Sanyo has been vigorously trying to more aggressively develop its own-brand and ODM flat-panel TV businesses, while Quanta has no own-brand development project and owns an independent TFT-LCD panel manufacturing subsidiary. The two parties signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) in December 2005 for the new venture.
Quanta Display Feeling Happy
The Quanta-Sanyo tie-up is the latest, but not the only, good news for Quanta Display, though it is a second-tier TFT-LCD panel maker in Taiwan with lower profit margins than first-tier counterparts such as AU Optronics Corp. (AUO) and Chi Mei Optoelectronics Corp. (CMO).
Quanta Display also just announced that its monthly shipments of 32-inch TV panels would outstrip 100,000 units in the second quarter, thanks to increasing orders from Sharp of Japan, the company's panel-technology partner and long-term panel client.
A recent news report by the Chinese-language Economic Daily News (EDN) stated that Sharp of Japan has begun procuring 26- and 32-inch LCD TV panels from Quanta Display.
פה מודגש :
*******************************************************
That is the first time for Sharp to outsource panels from outside suppliersin the past, the company has solely relied on its own panel plant. The outsourced production is being viewed in the industry as evidence of the Japanese LCD TV maker's strong determination to further advance its market share.
With the orders placed by Sharp, Quanta is beginning to realize its strong potential in the LCD TV-panel market. Currently, Quanta's 6G panel plant has a monthly capacity of about 30,000 substrates, and the volume is expected to rise to about 45,000 units in the second quarter of 2006, and to 60,000 units by the end of the year.
Some industry insiders have forecast Sharp to acquire about 20 percent of Quanta's TV-panel capacity.
***********************************************************
Statistics compiled by DisplaySearch, a leading flat panel display (FPD) market research and consulting firm, show that Sharp was previously the No. 1 LCD TV brand in the international market for a long period, but lost its leading position to Sony in the fourth quarter of 2005. Industry analysts attribute Sharp's loss to the company's insufficient panel production capacity.
Sharp recently set the goal of defeating Sony and regaining its No. 1 position in the LCD TV market, industry sources say, and has reportedly decided to outsource all of its TV panels that measure 32 inches and smaller from outside suppliers, including Taiwan's Quanta, CMO, and AUO.
According to Ted Lu, senior vice president of Quanta Computer and the man responsible for setting up the Quanta-Sanyo joint venture, the cooperation project will outsource TV panels from Quanta Display, but will also procure panels produced by other suppliers to reduce risks. An example of this strategy can be seen in the fact that even affiliated Quanta Display supplies about only one-third of the panels Quanta Computer requires for notebook PC displays.
Optimistic
Some industry experts are optimistic about the Quanta-Sanyo flat-panel TV venture, though the sector is very competitive.
While it has been a well-known home-appliance brand for quite a while, some exporters say, Sanyo entered the LCD TV business later than other major Japanese counterparts, and the company lacks the strong support of an in-house panel supply. This is why Sanyo currently ranks only No. 10 in the global LCD TV market, with a share of about 2 percent.
With the joint venture with Quanta Display, comments David Hsieh, vice president of DisplaySearch Greater China, Sanyo has a chance to boost its share of the global LCD TV market. According to the senior market analyst, Sanyo's advantage lies mainly in the company's long-term brand image and global marketing resources, which cannot be easily matched by newcomers. When these resources are added to the strong manufacturing advantages offered by Quanta Display, including reduced manufacturing costs and sales prices, Sanyo-branded LCD TVs are expected to enjoy strong sales performance in the future, Hsieh states.
מידע נוסף: http://66.102.9.104/search?q=cache:7ZoE ... =clnk&cd=1