Sony recently shared more details about its joint venture agreement with TCL. The new entity will be called Bravia Inc., and it will take over Sony’s global TV and related hardware operations. It will also continue to use the Sony and Bravia branding. That’s not it, now we have more details about the ownership and structure, what both parties gain from this ‘strategic partnership’. Let’s also address what this means for us, users.
Bravia Inc will be a Tokyo-based company. More specifically, the headquarters will be in Sony City Osaki, Tokyo, Japan.
The company will be responsible for Sony’s entire home entertainment portfolio, including TVs, B2B displays and LED panels, projectors, home audio products such as soundbars and home theatre systems. It will be handling end-to-end operations, from product development to sales and service of these products.
The company is expected to begin operations in April 2027, once it has the regulatory approvals.
The joint venture will be majority-owned by TCL (51%), with Sony holding the rest 49%. In other words, Bravia Inc will be a consolidated subsidiary of TCL Electronics Holdings Limited.
Sony will remain a strategic partner with continued influence on product direction.
Key executives in the leadership will be:
The deal values the business at around 102.8 billion yen, with TCL investing roughly 75.4 billion yen (about $475 million) for its stake.
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Sony is transferring its full home entertainment division into Bravia Inc, including:
Bravia Inc is a restructuring exercise, and as per analysts, the combined market share of Sony and TCL could reach about 16.7%. With this, the competition could spice up in the global TV market.
The joint venture will continue to carry the Sony branding and product identity. Its products could benefit from Sony’s processing and tuning chops, innovations and premium positioning and trust.
Meanwhile, Sony would stand to gain TCL’s manufacturing scale and cost efficiency.
In the near term, we expect to get Bravia-branded products with broadly the same audiovisual tuning associated with Sony.
And perhaps, over time, the combined strengths of Sony and TCL could result in more competitive pricing and faster rollout of newer technologies.
Also, currently, Sony is heavily invested in OLED for its flagships, and TCL has its bets on SQD Mini LED. So, let’s see how Bravia Inc balances these two directions. Over the longer term, maybe, the joint venture could source OLED panels from TCL’s inkjet OLED factory, though that remains speculative at this stage.
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