ADVERTISEMENT

LG Plans to Sell TVs That Roll Up Like Posters in 2019

The 65-inch TVs are said designed to revive business.

LG Plans to Sell TVs That Roll Up Like Posters in 2019
LG’s UHD rollable OLED display. (Source: LG Display)

(Bloomberg) -- LG Electronics Inc. plans to begin selling big-screen TVs next year that can be rolled up and put away like a poster, the centerpiece of an effort to revive an ailing business, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The envisioned 65-inch TVs will retract automatically at the touch of a button like a garage door, the person said on condition of anonymity because it’s an internal matter. They will sport organic light-emitting diode or OLED screens, which produce crisper images and fold more easily than traditional LCD or liquid-crystal display panels.

LG Plans to Sell TVs That Roll Up Like Posters in 2019

LG is counting on so-called “rollable” and OLED televisions to revive a consumer electronics business that’s grappling with price declines and stiffening Chinese competition. The South Korean conglomerate is shedding workers to streamline and refocus around future technologies, such as flexible displays. A prototype of the television displayed at LG’s research center in Seoul can be rolled up and stuffed into a box when not in use.

The company showed off the rollable screen technology earlier this year but 2019 will mark its first commercial release in TVs. LG declined to comment.

OLED TVs are estimated to account for just 1.1 percent of the market this year, while LCDs claim almost 98 percent, according to data tracker Statista. But unit shipments of OLED TVs are projected to grow 70 percent next year to 4 million from an estimated 2.35 million this year, it said.

Read more: TCL, BOE Lead Gen 10+ Expansion

LG is also preparing to make its mark on fifth-generation or 5G wireless technology, which is expected to revolutionize the mobile internet and power-up a plethora of gadgets from home appliances to cars. LG will likely unveil its first 5G smartphone at next year’s Mobile World Congress, the person said. U.S. telecommunications giant Sprint Corp. announced in August it’s working with LG to bring a device that runs on 5G to the U.S. in the first half. Plans for its own home market of Korea remain unclear, the person added.

While Apple Inc. plans to hold off until at least 2020 before offering a 5G iPhone, Samsung Electronics Co. is said to plan rolling out its entry next year after first introducing three versions of its new flagship, to be dubbed the Galaxy S10. Samsung is also said to be working on scrollable and stretchable screens that could eventually go into smartphones. The company declined to comment on its progress.

Unlike Samsung, LG has no plans to introduce a phone featuring “foldable” screens next year, one person familiar said. The company doubts the profitability of such a device given the uncertainty of demand and the cost of producing such a large screen for a mobile gadget, two people said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Min Jeong Lee in Tokyo at mlee754@bloomberg.net;Sam Kim in Seoul at skim609@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Divya Balji at dbalji1@bloomberg.net, Edwin Chan, Robert Fenner

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.