Price
Leadership Denied in LCD Panel Industry
Tim Smith, PhD, July 2006
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In terms of drama, the LCD market has pressed
my adrenaline gland for the past five years. Just last month, it
hit the accelerator pedal again. What follows is a case study of
a failed attempt to assert price leadership.
On June 15th, the Wall Street
Journal reported an announcement from AU Optronics that was a clear
signal to industry competitors to cut production and hold prices.
Within 24 hours, their largest competitor Samsung said no and opted
for continued downward pressure on prices.
How did AU Optronics signal a desire to maintain higher
prices? Was AU Optronics in a position to lead in pricing? Why did
their bid fail? And, why did Samsung choose to continue the pattern
of downward spiraling prices?
The Signal
AU Optronics signaled their competitors to cut production
through an interview with the Wall Street Journal. In their interview,
EVP Hui Hsiung suggested that an increase in inventories has led
to greater than expected price declines in the LCD panel industry.
He also declared that AU Optronics would reduce capacity utilization
by 5% in an effort to reduce inventories and prop up their prices.
Seemingly to ensure that their tactics were understood by competitors,
Mr. Hsiung added “If others follow, that will help prices
stabilize by the third quarter.”
In no uncertain terms, AU Optronics was communicating
to its competitors a need to cut production industry-wide and slow
the downward trend in pricing.
A key factor that enabled AU Optronics to attempt
to collude with its competitors on pricing, without necessarily
falling afoul of legal constraints, is that Mr. Hsiung wasn’t
speaking directly to his competitors. He was speaking to a reporter.
His comments could be interpreted as a statement of strategy for
AU Optronics followed by a speculation of what would happen if others
did the same.
While it may seem like a thin line between collusion
and conversation, the legal difference appeared to be enough for
AU Optronics. I will leave this issue for legal council and judicial
decisions.
The Power to Lead
AU Optronics is the third largest competitor in the industry
with 15% market share against LG Philips’ 18% and Samsung’s
20%. It may not be the largest competitor in the LCD panel industry,
but market share is not the only condition that determines the power
to lead the industry in pricing.
Many case studies have indicated that secondary and
tertiary industry players have the power to lead in price management.
Rather than raw size alone, a sufficient condition for claiming
the price leadership role is to have the ability to drop prices
significantly where doing so would force other industry players
to follow in pursuit. In this respect, AU Optronics held sufficient
power.
Just one week prior to their conversation regarding
prices and production, CFO Max Cheng of AU Optronics openly discussed
their investigation into building a new $4 billion 8th generation
manufacturing plant. The new plant would produce 50 inch LCD panels
in an industry where larger panels mean lower manufacturing costs
on a per square inch basis. As if to underline their vision of of
the industry, Mr. Cheng stated “This is typical game theory.
If your competitor invests, you have to invest. Otherwise, you are
being marginalized.”
Couple their sizable market share with the threat
of building an 8th generation plant, and AU Optronics clearly had
sufficient power to be the leader in terms of encouraging industry
wide restraint on production and pricing.
The Failure
But, they didn’t succeed.
Within 24 hours of announcing their plans to reduce
capacity utilization in an effort to show restraint in pricing,
Samsung’s VP of LCDs, Yeongduk Cho, announced “We have
no plans to cut our production levels even if others are doing so.”
Clearly, Samsung had gotten the message from AU Optronics.
And clearly, Samsung was replying with a NO. Why?
While it is impossible to fully know the reasons of
another’s actions, we can identify at least one reason why
AU Optronic’s bid for restraint failed. Signaling to competitors
the choice to restrain oneself in cutting prices and expecting them
to do the same implies the potential for coordinated action among
rational actors. This is where the failure comes in. Although they
are major industry competitors, the combined market share of AU
Optronics, Samsung, and LG Philips is still only 53%. 47% of the
LCD panel market is shared by numerous other competitors, some of
which have announced independent plans to build 8th generation plants,
and few of which have sufficient reasons to practice restraint when
it comes to slowing the freefall of prices. In short, they are not
reliably rational.
In other words, the industry isn’t ready to
call it quits in the pricing game when it is still taking strides
in advancing the technology and exploring new markets. Perhaps in
a year or two the market growth will slow sufficiently to allow
for mergers and acquisitions, followed by disciplined industry-wide
price management.
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References
1. Yun-Hee Kim, “AU Optronics Cuts LCD Output In Bid to Stabilize
Falling Prices”, Wall Street Journal, June 15, 2006, p B3.
2. Yun-Hee Kim, “Samsung Sees No Glut, Will Maintain LCD Output”,
Wall Street Journal, June 16, 2006, p B2.
3. “June 2006 Quarterly Large-Area TFT Shipment Report”,
DisplaySearch private communication. (http://www.displaysearch.com/)
4. Evan Ramstad, “The 50-Inch Screen Poses a Gamble”,
Wall Street Journal, June 8, 2006, p. B3.
_______
Author
Tim Smith, PhD, Editor in Chief of The Wiglaf Journal and Adjunct
Professor of Marketing at DePaul University.
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