Japan's Denso considering $440 million investment in JOLED: Kyodo

Amid the growing popularity for OLED screens which can show more vivid colors than liquid crystal display


Reuters December 26, 2017
Denso Corp's robot arm "Denoute-san" plays Japanese chess, also known as Shogi, at a booth during Niconico Chokaigi 2015 in Makuhari, east of Tokyo, Japan April 26, 2015. PHOTO: REUTERS

Japanese auto parts maker Denso is considering a 50 billion yen ($440 million) investment in organic light-emitting diode (OLED) panel maker JOLED, Kyodo news reported, citing sources close to the matter.

JOLED, majority owned by a state-backed technology investment fund, sold its inaugural batch of OLED screens this month, and has said it wants to raise 100 billion yen by the end of March to expand its currently limited capacity.

The move comes amid the growing popularity for OLED screens, which are generally thinner and can show more vivid colors than liquid crystal display (LCD) panels. Smartphone makers have been shifting to OLED, including Apple which has adopted them for its iPhone X.

Toyota, Panasonic consider joint development of EV batteries

Cash-strapped domestic display makers such as Japan Display, which has a 15 per cent stake in JOLED, and rival Sharp are struggling to respond to the shift, letting Korean rivals Samsung and LG Display take the lead.

The Nikkei reported earlier this month that Japan Display had considered investing in JOLED but decided it did not have the funds. Japan Display has said it wants to start mass-producing OLED screens to better compete with Samsung and that it needs capital to do so but has so far declined to disclose details of any negotiations.

Kyodo’s report said that Sony and Panasonic, which both own 5 per cent in JOLED, are also expected to invest 5 billion to 10 billion yen each.

Sumitomo Chemical Co and Screen are considering chipping in, and the four companies are together seen investing 20 billion to 40 billion yen in JOLED, Kyodo said.

South Korea's Samsung develops 'world's smallest' DRAM chip

A JOLED representative said the company was in talks with various materials and equipment makers about the investment, but that nothing specific had been decided.

A Denso spokesman said the reported plan wasn’t something the company announced, while a Screen Holdings spokeswoman denied the company was considering the investment. Sony said nothing had been decided, while Panasonic and Sumitomo Chemical declined to comment.

JOLED was created in 2015 by merging the OLED divisions of Sony and Panasonic.

Analysts have said it lacks the scale and expertise of display makers which have smartphone-size panels. JOLED is 75 per cent owned by state-backed fund, the Innovation Network Corporation of Japan.

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ