Thursday, August 25, 2005
Hitachi Unveils World's First Terabyte DVD Recorder
Hitachi, Japan's largest electronics conglomerate, is still a relatively small player in the DVD recorder market, trailing industry leaders Matsushita Industrial Co. Ltd. (6752.T),
But it hopes its new line-up, which also includes models able to store 160 gigabytes, 250 gigabytes and 500 gigabytes of data, will help boost its market share and turn its loss-making DVD recorder business profitable in October-March, the second half of the business year.
``We entered the market last year and have only been able to grab about 3 percent of the market. It's been hard to earn a decent return on investment with such (low) volumes,'' Norio Ogimoto, general manager of Hitachi's storage media group, told a news conference.
``But we plan on being profitable with these new models given the volumes and prices we expect to see from them,'' he said.
Hitachi said the new models would be the first on the market able to simultaneously record two high-definition programs, and it hopes this will be a key selling point given the spread of terrestrial digital broadcasting in Japan.
The recorders will go on sale in Japan from next month. They are expected to retail from about 130,000 yen for the cheapest model to 230,000 yen for the one-terabyte recorder, which stores data on two 500 gigabyte hard disk drives.
One terabyte is equal to 1 trillion bytes of data. One gigabyte equals 1 billion bytes.
Hitachi said it did not have concrete plans for launching the products in overseas markets, explaining that consumers in Europe and the United States were not as keen on high-end recorders.
Japan accounts for more than half of the global DVD recorder market. DVD recorders have been slow to take off in other markets such as the United States, where TV set-top boxes with hard drives, such as those made by TiVo Inc. (TIVO.O), are popular.
MM Research Institute predicts that Japan's DVD recorder market will grow 26 percent to 5.6 million units in the current financial year to next March, up from 4.43 million in 2004/05.
Matsushita was the top seller of DVD recorders in Japan in 2004/05, controlling 27 percent of the market. Sony was next at 20.6 percent, Toshiba at 15.6 percent, and Sharp Corp.came in fourth with a 10.2 percent share.
Hitachi said it was aiming to grab 35 percent of the Japanese market for high-definition DVD recorders in the second half of this business year. High-definition recorders currently make up about 15 percent of the overall market, but that percentage is expected to grow strongly over the next several years.
Shares of Hitachi closed down 0.87 percent at 681 yen, underperforming the benchmark Nikkei average (.N225), which gained 0.24 percent on the day.
source:http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/technology/tech-japan-hitachi.html