Samsung Electronics slapped
a $13,000 price tag on its first curved, super-thin OLED television to
go on sale, the same price as rival LG Electronics and one that
underscores the high costs of the technology.
Samsung is hoping that its
success with OLED screens in smartphones such as its Galaxy S4 will also
pay off in TVs, but consumers interested its 55-inch screen television
must be willing to pay some five times more than popular flat-screen
equivalents.
At the moment, OLED
televisions are still very much a niche market and Samsung warned that
industry forecasts for sales growth were a bit too optimistic.
"We have just introduced
our first OLED TV and have to see consumer response to gauge overall
market demand," Kim Hyunsuk, a Samsung executive vice president, told
reporters.
Research firm DisplaySearch
has forecast global industry-wide sales of OLED televisions at 50,000
this year, at 600,000 next year and rapid growth thereafter to reach 7
million in 2016.
LG, which currently offers
both curved and non-curved 55-inch screens, is estimated to have only
sold a few hundred screens so far after starting sales earlier this
year.
Samsung said it will begin
selling its curved OLED television outside South Korea from July but did
not specify which countries. It has no plans to offer a non-curved one
this year.
Organic light-emitting
diode technology has long been touted as the future of consumer
electronics displays, offering crisper picture resolution, a faster
response time and high contrast images. It also allows for curved
televisions, which manufacturers say offer a more immersive TV
experience.
Both Samsung and rival LG
Display, a unit of LG Electronics, have invested heavily in OLED,
seeking to emulate the success they had with LCDs, which helped them
squash Japanese rivals such as Sony and allowed them to capture coveted
roles as suppliers for Apple.
Samsung is now the world's biggest TV manufacturer, and the South Korean duo now sell almost half of all TVs worldwide.
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