Sharp Focuses on Manufacturing
A $9 Billion Plant In Japan Will Make LCD, Solar Panels

By YUKARI IWATANI KANE
Wall Street Journal

July 9, 2008; Page B1

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121557034874238221.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace


In an old seaport city near its Osaka headquarters, Sharp Corp. is building 
a $9 billion factory complex the size of 32 baseball stadiums to make 
liquid-crystal-display panels and solar panels. The complex, which Sharp 
broke ground last November, will be the world's largest LCD and 
next-generation solar panel plant when it is ready sometime in the next 
fiscal year, ending March 2010. It will house most of its major suppliers 
on the same premises. Sharp itself will invest about $4.3 billion.

While Apple Inc. is leading a trend in the electronics industry to 
outsource hardware manufacturing and focus on design and software, Sharp is 
making a huge bet that keeping manufacturing of LCD and solar panels 
in-house will give it a big competitive advantage.

The Sakai factory is the culmination of a decision 10 years ago by 
Katsuhiko Machida, Sharp's chief executive, to narrow the company's focus 
when it was barely making a profit. Sharp at the time was making 
cathode-ray tube televisions, but they weren't highly regarded because the 
company didn't make its own tubes. It was also making big investments in 
semiconductors, but was a minor player in the competitive industry.

So Mr. Machida, then president, ended production of CRT TVs, cut 
investments in semiconductors and focused on LCD technology, even though it 
was still an emerging, money-losing business. Mr. Machida, who saw 
potential in using LCD panels in televisions, declared that Sharp would 
replace every traditional television with an LCD TV in 10 years.

In the past decade, Sharp has become one of the world's largest LCD-panel 
manufacturers, and it nearly doubled its revenue to 3.4 trillion yen ($31.7 
billion) and more than tripled its operating profit to 183.7 billion yen. 
Sharp's solar-panel business, meanwhile, is still small, but it is the 
world's second-largest manufacturer of the product after Germany's Q-Cells AG.

There are big risks. Prices for LCD panels have been steady so far, but 
several companies are planning new plants that will significantly increase 
global supplies, which could lead to price declines. What's more, some 
rivals like Sony Corp. also are developing next-generation technologies 
like the organic light-emitting diode, or OLED, which could eventually make 
LCD technology obsolete.

Still, if Sharp continues to be successful, the focused-manufacturing 
strategy could be a model for other Japanese electronics makers, which find 
Apple's outsourcing model a turnoff and are still trying to figure out a 
way to remain a manufacturer while growing its profit in an industry that 
is rapidly commoditizing.

In 2001, Mr. Machida created a stir by declaring his intention to build a 
$1.4 billion LCD panel plant in the town of Kameyama in central Japan, even 
though the trend at the time was to move factories offshore to places like 
China, where products could be made more cheaply.

The construction of the Kameyama plant was a turning point for Sharp, 
because it led to a technological breakthrough that allowed the company to 
make bigger and better panels before its rivals. For the first time, 
Sharp's TVs were in strong demand, particularly in Japan, as consumers 
sought to buy made-in-Kameyama TVs.

The new plant, built near its headquarters, takes that strategy a step 
further. Designed for both LCDs and solar panels, which share a similar 
manufacturing process, it will include factories for its major suppliers 
including Asahi Glass Co. and Corning Inc., which makes the glass for the 
panels. Even the gas and electric companies will have facilities on the 
premises.

Sharp plans to continue to make televisions and other electronics goods. 
But Mr. Machida says he believes LCD and solar panels will be more 
important to the company's survival and growth because they can 
differentiate themselves by packing more technology into them.

"There will eventually be no distinction between a parts manufacturer and 
an electronics maker," says Mr. Machida, adding that LCD panels have the 
potential to embed so much technology that a television in the future could 
consist of just a panel and a plastic frame.

When that happens, Mr. Machida figures that the parts makers will profit 
even if the finished goods become commoditized.

Whether Sharp can survive with the current strategy in the long term is 
still an open question. But Mr. Machida says he isn't worried because he 
just needs to recover his investments, something he is confident he can do.

By that time, Sharp hopes that its investments in its solar-panel business 
will pay off. Solar currently generates just less than 1% of global energy, 
but that is expected to increase to as much as 37% in 2040, according to 
the Cambridge, Mass.-based Prometheus Institute for Sustainable 
Development, which follows the industry. The research firm also estimates 
that the market could increase to more than $1 trillion in 2040, compared 
with $20 billion last year.

Sharp believes that even if competition increases, there should be plenty 
of business to go around. Sharp last month made another huge bet in this 
area by forming a partnership with an Italian power company to investigate 
the possibility of building a solar-generated electricity plant.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

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