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Samsung Joins Siemens and Philips in Rethinking Role of LED Lighting Systems

Nov. 7, 2014
Clarification: Soon after posting this story we received a message from the press office at Philips, seeking to explain that Philips is not retreating from the lighting business.  "Philips is not exiting the LED arena. The company recently split into Philips Lighting and Philips Health Care, but this was a financial decision and not one that changes its commitment to LED lighting. Philips continuing to innovate with LEDs with products such as slim style for consumers and slim surface for businesses and architecture," Andrew Dearling of Emanate PR told us by e-mail. The text below has been revised to correct the misunderstanding.

Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, Seoul, South Korea, said it will close its light emitting diode (LED) lighting business outside of South Korea, scaling back what the company had identified as a key growth business just four years ago, according to a Reuters report.

The company will continue supplying LED components to OEM lighting manufacturers worldwide and developing display lighting technologies in support of its primary business lines in smart phones, tablets and other consumer products.

The pullback follows closely on decisions over the past year by Siemens to spin off its Osram lighting business and then Philips’ announcements that it would spin off LED components and automotive lighting into a separate company and most recently that it would separate off its lighting solutions business from its consumer and healthcare products and handle them as stand-alone businesses.

Global price competition has lowered profitability throughout the LED lighting industry even while the transition of the lighting market from traditional sources such as incandescent, fluorescent and high-intensity discharge lamps to LED technology is still driving rapid sales growth. That wave of growth is expected to crest fairly rapidly over coming years as lighting shifts to solid-state technologies that can last many years without replacements or even much need for maintenance.

Legacy lighting manufacturers such as Osram and Philips had the added drag of continuing to produce all those legacy technologies for a shrinking market while fighting against pricing pressure from competitors without that handicap, many of them from China. Samsung wasn’t hampered by the legacy lighting business, but a source for the Reuters report cited the small revenue stream Samsung was seeing from lighting.

In 2010, Samsung Group identified LED, rechargeable cells for hybrid electric cars, solar cells, medical devices and biopharmaceuticals as new growth drivers, but the conglomerate has yet to gain traction in most of these businesses.