Pioneer stop Plasma production.......


Pioneer is the world's fifth-largest plasma TV manufacturer and has constantly struggled for relevance against the larger Panasonic brand (Matsushita). Now, Pioneer will buy its panels from the competing brand and it will begin picking up LCD panels from... you guessed it - Sharp. This makes three major manufacturers who are backing Sharp panel production in the coming year (inclusive of both Toshiba and Sony Electronics). Our guess is that Sharp is going to be the first to market with the new line of super-thin LCD panels that fans such as myself have been dreaming about for some time.

Investors have long known that Pioneer was bleeding red ink over its plasma division having several years ago decided not to compete in the low-price market. "This is an excellent development," said Mitsushige Akino, chief fund manager at Ichiyoshi Investment Management. "Pioneer could have chosen another way and stepped up its plasma investment despite the fact that the business is bleeding red ink, but it's a wise step to decide against that... a quicker decision would have been even better," he said.

This is no easy decision for the Japan-based manufacturer. Pioneer has spent nearly $1 billion (yes, with a 'b') on four plasma TV manufacturing plants and two additional plants it purchased from NEC.

According to the report, a Pioneer spokesman said the company would unveil its display business strategy when it announces company-wide business plans on Friday.

The only thing surprising about this announcement is its timing. Pioneer just last year launched its premier "Project Kuro" line which promised total black levels and was designed to give consumers a no-holds-barred choice for high-end plasma displays. Pioneer had repeatedly stated that the Kuro brand was gaining speed and 2008 would show that Pioneer had captured the high-end market. The problem is that Pioneer, while predicting several hundreds of thousands of plasma TV sales, was up against rival Panasonic who had a planned sales volume of more than 5 million units.

For those concerned, this doesn't mean that Pioneer will exit the plasma business. It simply means that they are, in the interim at least, looking to leave the plasma panel manufacturing business, opting instead to purchase their panels from a company like Matsushita (Panasonic).

As to what this means for plasma as a technology, we believe that, as predicted, this is the beginning of the end. It's longevity depends on a few factors now:

Marketing and consumer perspective of the technology
How quickly the new super-thin LCD TVs hit the consumer market (Hitachi is already releasing some)
The continuation of rapidly-dropping LCD panel prices
How much Matsushita invests in plasma versus its LCD manufacturing efforts in upcoming years
So there you have it. Plasma has begun its exit from the market as consolidation forces one of the largest proponents of the technology finally exits the manufacturing business and takes on LCD. We're sad to see it go, but it appeared to us at this year's CES that ultra-thin LCDs are going to hit the market much sooner than ultra-thin plasmas. When that happens there is going to be an incredible surge in popularity for the <1-inch thin displays that will push plasma technology further away. The same effect has happened to rear projection television, with manufacturers leaving those markets and technology in droves. Just this year, Sony decided to eschew all screen technologies save LCD and OLED - and it had a large stake in its LCoS-based SXRD line.
chadnliz
Interesting . . . thanks for the post. I do think that while Pioneer seems like a huge company compared to many in the specialty audio business . . . they're still a chump-change company in the OEM parts manufacturing business. And Matsushita isn't simply a big player, they're THE big player.

I think that this being "the beginning of the end" for television plasma displays is WAY premature. The flat-panel television market is far from mature, and I'm guessing the Pioneer has to juggle its consumer-sales profits very carefully with its OEM business, and since the consumer products have to be highly price-competitive right now, it makes sense that they'd dump the OEM parts-profit equation onto a company that has deep enough pockets to play the acronym battle with Sharp.

Also, Pioneer's manufacturing facilities aren't necessarily simply going to disappear . . . the bean-counters will most likely work their magic to make them part of some other entity, and all of those legacy R&D, development, and buildout/tooling costs will escape handily into the luminiferous ether.
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I consider Sony the vanguard.
This was quite true in the grand old days when founder Akio Morita was still running the company, esp. the Trinitron tube with its slotted shadow mask. But quite unfortunately those days are long gone, and it's wise to consider each Sony product individually on its own merits. There's still some great stuff, but there's plenty of crap mixed in.
Sony never sold a plasma screen
???? huh? I've seen a ton of Sony plasmas. And I'm pretty sure they weren't all received free of charge . . .