Date: 17/01/2011
LCD Display panel industry to face the demand-supply risk of Tablet computers
With tablet demand growing in 2011, the electronic components industry may have to face the challenge of inventory maintenance for this new mobile device. With the demand more of a predictable nature, the component vendors mainly LCD display panels vendors may have take the risk of manufacturing more LCD panels in less time. Since the panel formfactor is different from smart phones the LCD panel makers have to make separate production line for tablet computer. They may have to face the risk of sudden demand or excess supply, much like DRAM market.
As per iSuppli global tablet shipments are expected to more than triple in 2011, rising to 57.6 million units, up from 17.1 million in 2010. Although Apple will retain market dominance with 70.4 percent share of tablet shipments next year, the company will face mounting competition from new rivals producing consumption tablets, including Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., Hewlett-Packard Co., Research in Motion Ltd., Dell Inc. and dozens of other companies says iSuppli.
"IHS believes that as these iPad competitors turn their focus to tablets, the demand for netbook and notebook displays will soften," said Joe Abelson, vice president of displays at IHS. "And because the tablet market is so new and volumes are unpredictable, display suppliers will be forced to gamble production capacity on the unrealistically high projections of their tablet customers. With different panel sizes and specs in play, the industry should expect to see significant inventory shortages and excesses to occur at the SKU level throughout 2011, potentially accompanied by heavy discounting or scrapping of unused displays."
Other Display Trends to Watch in 2011 as per iSuppli:
1. While the tablet face-off will dominate much attention in 2011, IHS iSuppli forecasts indicate this year also will bring a breakthrough in the manufacturing of active-matrix organic light emitting diode (AMOLED) displays. Massive investments in new materials, processes and production capacity will enable Samsung-currently the only major supplier of AMOLEDs-as well as LG and perhaps one or two other display companies to drive AMOLED penetration deeper into mobile devices. This may also be the year when premium AMOLED televisions move beyond trade shows and onto retail shelves.
2. Another notable trend in 2011 will be the emergence of 3-D capability as a standard feature for higher-end televisions. In 2010, 3-D was the buzz for every television manufacturer and media outlet. But all the hype couldn't overcome the fact that first-generation 3-D TVs were unpleasant to watch-assuming viewers could find any 3-D content to watch.
3. In 2011 3-D capability will be added to the checklist for many high-end models, as TV brands have made it their mission to proliferate this technology to more consumers, even at the cost of quality of presentation. While this may lead to some near-term success, these brands may be risking long-term customer loyalty, especially if early adopters learn in a year or two that their investment is obsolete because vastly improved technology has been released, such as glasses-free 3-D or projected 3-D.