Funai taking over Phillips brand name for tvs

SEE THE LAST PARAGRAPH - BAD NEWS

Stating that its results had been "clouded" by adversity in the television market, Royal Philips Electronics this morning announced that its core profit for the first quarter fell 28% on sales that increased just over half a percentage point.

Overall EBITA (earnings before interest, taxes, and amortization) for the company, which includes healthcare and lighting divisions in addition to consumer products from electric toothbrushes to televisions, fell to EURO 265 million ($420 million) from EURO 370 million ($586 million) a year ago. Overall sales ticked up slightly to EURO 5.965 billion ($9.46 billion), compared with EURO 5.930 billion ($9.40 billion) a year ago. The company noted that first-quarter revenue last year had enjoyed a EURO 733 million ($1.2 billion) bump from the partial sale of Philips' stake in TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp).

The Consumer Lifestyle division, which includes domestic and cosmetic appliances as well as music players and "connected displays" (including televisions), turned in grim results, with EBITA down 45% to EURO 77 million ($122 million) from EURO 141 million ($223 million) in Q1 2007; sales fell 5% from EURO 2.82 billion ($4.5 billion) to EURO 2.66 billion ($4.2 billion). The company noted that EBITA for connected displays dropped by EURO 44 million ($70 million).

Philips intends to sign a five-year deal with Japan's Funai, which will take over sourcing, distribution, marketing, and sales of Philips- branded televisions in North America effective in September. Last month, Philips also announced a further reduction of its stake in LG Display.

Reply to
hrhofmann
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Any bad news for Philips is music to my ears.

Mark Z.

Reply to
Mark D. Zacharias

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Mark:

Ok - But it means a good product is going to be even harder to find, Philips was not great, but better than Funai.

Bob H

Reply to
hrhofmann

Funai has been making a large portion of Philips branded electronics for over 10 years. I guess they might as well make it official. Andy Cuffe

snipped-for-privacy@gmail.com

Reply to
Andy Cuffe

This is almost TOO easy...

Much of what we consider to be the poor state of the consumer electronics industry, at least insofar as poor serviceability, cost-effectiveness of repair, poor customer service, manufacturing in China using children and political prisoners, shoddy manufacture, and a generally complete disregard for the customer and servicers alike, was largely because of companies like Philips in the first place.

Figuratively speaking, they should be hunted down around the globe like terrorists.

In my view any good products they may have occasionally made are cancelled out by their virtually criminal lack of support.

Mark Z.

Reply to
Mark D. Zacharias

Mark:

Ok - But it means a good product is going to be even harder to find, Philips was not great, but better than Funai.

Bob H

I don't think that you can make a case that Philips products nor their service support have been better than Funai in the areas that they have similar products.

Leonard

Reply to
Leonard Caillouet

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