NEW YORK (Reuters) - Sony Corp.'s (6758.T: Quote, Profile, Research) U.S. unit is looking to high-resolution cameras and televisions and a beefed up online music service to breathe life into its troubled brand, but profits will take time to improve, company executives said on Thursday.
Sony Electronics, Sony's largest unit, expects improved demand for big screen TVs, such as its Grand Wega line, but sees prices dropping for liquid crystal display (LCD) TVs this year, making profit margins very tight and perhaps forcing smaller players out of the market.
"This is not going to be an easy holiday season for anybody," Stan Glasgow, president of Sony Electronics' U.S. consumer sales, told Reuters after a press briefing. "(The TV market) has become much more competitive, which is going to take price points lower and lower."
Glasgow added that while the proliferation of flat panel TV makers has deflated prices and pinched margins, that same phenomenon will eventually push smaller players out, leaving perhaps three or four major brands.
"We are going to take advantage of (LCD manufacturing alliances) to stay competitive in the marketplace," he said. "It is going to be tough, but we feel there is the capability of making money."
At a press briefing held one day after Sony Corp. said that it would narrow its research and development focus, Sony Electronics' executives said they expect to launch new products more quickly than in previous years to compete with myriad devices such as Apple Computer Inc.'s (AAPL.O: Quote, Profile, Research) iPod digital music players.
"We are making a push in the personal audio area," said Dick Komiyama, president of Sony Electronics. "Apple has done an outstanding job in creating a new business model using service and hardware. But we have a strong legacy in this area where we should be successful."
USING "CONNECT" TO BOOST WALKMAN
Sony decades ago popularized portable music machines with its Walkman line. But today, demand for the iPod and Apple's iTunes online music management service has dominated rivals, including Sony's newer Walkman players and its Connect music download system.
Connect is key to rebuilding attraction to the Walkman, Komiyama said. An easier-to-use Web site with choice of video and text content in addition to music could drive demand for Sony devices, including mobile phones and hard drive portable music players.
"We are improving significantly on the service level this fall," he said. "We are trying to establish a new scope for personal entertainment."
He declined to detail the changes to the service, including which videos would be available and what they might cost.
The company said it has also talked with XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc. (XMSR.O: Quote, Profile, Research) and Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. (SIRI.O: Quote, Profile, Research) about developing new devices, though no deals are in place.
"We have been in talks with them for more than a year," Glasgow said. "Anything is possible."
Despite their long-term optimism, the executives noted that several new ideas, such as an expansion of the (UMD) Universal Media Disk video format used for movies that currently play only in Sony's PlayStation Portable (PSP) gaming device, may not be available in coming months, or even this year.
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Source: Reuters
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