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BERLIN - Panasonic expects demand for large plasma televisions to slide in the next two years but to hold steady after that at about 30 per cent of the total market for large, flat-screen TVs, an executive said.
"Plasma can keep 30 per cent of the market in TVs of 37 inches and above," said Hiro Wada, who is in charge of product planning for visual products and display devices at Panasonic, a brand name of Matsushita.
He said plasma currently had 40 per cent of that market.
Matsushita is the world's biggest maker of plasma TVs, which are losing ground to LCD (liquid crystal display) models as LCD technology for larger screens improves.
It also makes LCD TVs in sizes up to 37 inches.
Fans say plasma gives better picture reproduction because it is self-illuminating, unlike LCD, which has to be backlit. But plasma's share of the flat-screen market has slid and rivals Sony and Sharp make only LCD TVs.
Matsushita is investing $2.3 billion ($NZ3.2bn) to help double its plasma capacity in the next two years.
"In the plasma market, we want to stay number one," Wada said in an interview at IFA, Europe's biggest consumer electronics trade fair, which is being held in Berlin.
He said plasma technology's relative youth at only 10 years old compared with about 30 years for LCD meant plasma still had plenty of room to improve.
And he predicted that half of all flat-panel demand would be for TVs with diagonals above 30 inches by 2010.
He said he expected prices for TVs of 37 inches and above to fall by about 30 per cent this year while prices for smaller TVs would fall by 10-15 per cent.
Wada added that Matsushita aimed to sell about 2 million TVs this year in the United States, where it makes about 30 per cent of its sales.
Asked whether he was worried that a US consumer credit crunch could harm Matsushita's Christmas business there, he said: "We are a little bit concerned." He declined to elaborate.
- REUTERS