Sharp Corporation

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Sharp Corporation
RevenueDecrease ¥2.27 trillion (2020)[2]
Increase ¥52.77 billion (2020)[2]
Increase ¥20.96 billion (2020)[2]
Total assetsDecrease ¥1.83 trillion (2020)[2]
Total equityIncrease ¥364.59 billion (2020)[2]
Owners
Number of employees
46,206 (2023)[3]
Subsidiaries
List
  • Sharp Marketing Japan
  • Sharp Energy Solutions
  • ScienBiziP Japan
  • Dynabook
  • Sharp Semiconductor Innovation
  • Sharp Fukuyama Laser
  • Sharp Cocoro Life
  • Sharp Display Technology
  • Sharp NEC Display Solutions (66.0%)
  • Sharp Sensing Technology
  • Sharp Electronics Corporation
  • Sharp Electronics of Canada
  • Sharp Corporation Mexico
  • Sharp Electronics (Europe) Limited
  • Sharp International Finance (U.K.)
  • Sharp Electronics (Europe) GmbH
  • Sharp Middle East Free Zone Establishment
  • Sharp Universal Technology (Shenzhen)
  • Shanghai Sharp Electronics
  • Sharp Hong Kong
  • Yantai Xiaye Electronics
  • Sharp (Taiwan) Electronics
  • Sharp Electronics (Malaysia)
  • Sharp Singapore Electronics
  • Sharp Appliances (Thailand)
  • Sharp Manufacturing (Thailand)
  • Sharp Manufacturing Vietnam
  • Sharp Business Systems (India)
  • Sharp Corporation of Australia
Websiteglobal.sharp sharpconsumer.com

Sharp Corporation (シャープ株式会社, Shāpu

Kabushiki-gaisha) is a Japanese electronics company.[4][5] It is headquartered in Sakai, Osaka and was founded by Tokuji Hayakawa in 1912 in Honjo, Tokyo and established as the Hayakawa Metal Works Institute in Abeno, Osaka in 1924.[6] Since 2016, it is majority owned by Taiwan-based manufacturer Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd., better known as Foxconn.[7][8]

Sharp's net sales reached 2.55 trillion yen in fiscal year 2022 (ending February 29, 2024), according to Statista Research Department. This represents a slight increase from the previous year's figure of 2.5 trillion yen.[9]

History

Early years 1912–1945

Sharp's former headquarters in Abeno-ku, Osaka

In 1912, Tokuji Hayakawa founded a metal workshop in Honjo, Tokyo. The first of his many inventions was a snap buckle named 'Tokubijo'. Another of his inventions was the Ever-Ready Sharp mechanical pencil in 1915. The product became one of the first internationally available mechanical pencils (while concurrent US design replaced it soon and became a modern type), and due to this big success the Sharp Corporation derived its name from it.[10] After the pencil business was destroyed by the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake, the company relocated to Osaka and began designing the first generation of Japanese radio sets. These went on sale in 1925.

The company was established as "Hayakawa Metal Works" in 1924, in Tanabe-cho, Osaka. In 1942, the name was changed to "Hayakawa Electric Industry Company".

1945–1999

Sharp portable TV
Sharp MD-MS701H

In 1953, Hayakawa Electric started producing the first Japan-made

TV sets
(the "Sharp TV3-14T").

In 1964, the company developed the world's first

LSI calculator was introduced in 1969. This was the first pocketable calculator priced at less than JP¥100,000 (less than US$300), and turned out to be a popular item.[11]
Also in the same era the company introduced the first microwave oven with a turntable between 1964 and 1966. The company was renamed Sharp Corporation in 1970.

Sharp produced the first

SF-1 SNES TV (1990). All of these units are considered collectors items on the secondary market. One of the company's main inventors of LCD calculators was Tadashi Sasaki.[12]

Sharp introduced low-cost microwave ovens affordable for residential use in the late 1970s. Sharp was known as a mass marketed electronics manufacturer, known for quality, durability and affordability, however Sharp ventured into the high end stereo market in 1976 with the introduction of high end receivers, amplifiers, speakers, turntables and cassette recorders. The Optonica line as it was called, consisted of high quality and technically advanced components, that was expanded in 1979, to cover a broader selection of high end equipment. During this run, Sharp introduced digital technology to some of the Optonica products, along with the traditional analogue products, and offered a complete selection of models ranging from low power high end receivers to very powerful models. The line was again changed, in 1981, and moved mainly into digital high end, complete stereo systems with advanced technological features setting the trend towards the digital age. The line was discontinued after 1981, but the Optonica line was again re-introduced in the late 1980s for a high end line of television receivers and higher quality mass market audio products such as VCR's, surround sound receivers, CD cassette boom boxes, and portable cassette players.

The first wall-mountable TV was introduced by Sharp in 1992.[13]

2000–2012

Sharp's Mobile Communications Division created the world's first commercial camera phone, the J-SH04, in Japan in 2000.[14][15]

Since 2000, Sharp heavily invested in LCD panel manufacturing plants: Kameyama in 2004, Sakai in 2009. The Sakai plant is still the only 10th generation LCD manufacturing plant on the globe and its best fit for production of 60-inch or larger panels. However, the 2008 financial crisis and strong Yen (especially against Won) significantly lowered world demand for Japanese LCD panels. Furthermore, the switch to digital TV broadcasting was virtually completed in Japan by the middle of 2011. Via Japanese government issued coupons for digital TV sets, consumers were encouraged to purchase digital TV sets until March 2011. This hit the Japanese LCD TV market, reducing it almost by half from 2010. All of those events strongly hit Sharp's LCD business. As the result, the Sakai LCD plant suffered a reduced operating rate until Q3 2012.

In June 2005 Sharp produced the largest LCD television at the time, with a display of 65 inches. It went on sale in August 2005 in Japan.[16] From 2005 to 2010 Sharp was the biggest mobile phone brand in Japan. Since then it has been constantly switching places through financial quarters against rivals Fujitsu, Apple and Sony. Sharp acquired a controlling stake in Pioneer Corporation in 2007.[17] At CES 2007, Sharp introduced a prototype largest LCD TV, with a screen size of 108 inches.[18] In July 2008 Sharp announced that the model will go into production for the Japanese market.[19]

In 2008, Sharp collaborated with Emblaze Mobile on the Monolith, "…an ambitious project to design the ultimate holistic mobile device".[20] The project was never brought to market. Key software developers were later picked up by other companies. On 25 June 2009, Sharp and Pioneer agreed to form a joint venture comprising their optical businesses, called "Pioneer Digital Design and Manufacturing Corporation".[21] In 2010, Sharp stopped developing PCs to focus on tablets.[22]

In 2012 Sharp unveiled the largest production TV at the time, with a screen size of 80 inches. It is part of the Aquos range and went on sale in Japan at around JP¥950,000.[23]

2012–present

2012 was the 100th anniversary for Sharp but it announced the worst financial record in its history, with a loss of JP¥376 billion (US$4.7 billion) in April 2012. In September, Sharp announced job cuts.[24] In 2014, Sharp was able to stem losses and deliver a positive net income for its first quarter results.[25]

In March 2012 the Taiwan-based electronics company Hon Hai, trading as Foxconn, agreed to acquire a 10% stake in Sharp Corporation for US$806 million, and to purchase up to 50 percent of the LCD displays produced at Sharp's plant in Sakai, Japan.[26] In June 2012, Hon Hai chairman Terry Gou paid money for Sakai plant and got 50% ownership of the plant. However, since the announcement in March, Sharp's share price continued declining and reached JP¥192 on 3 August. Sharp deal's price was originally JP¥550 per share. Both companies agreed to renegotiate the share price, but they never came to an agreement.[27]

Sharp led the market share of mobile phones in the Japanese market in April 2012.[28] Sharp announced it accepted a US$100 million investment from Samsung in March 2013.[29] In 2013 Sharp developed the most efficient solar cell, converting a record 44.4% of sunlight into electricity.[30] In 2013, Sharp Corporation was the tenth-largest, by market share, television manufacturer in the world.[31] In Japan it has been a long-time leader.[32]

After years of huge losses in its overseas TV business, Sharp sold its Mexico TV factory to Chinese electronics manufacturer

LCD TVs a decade earlier.[34] Sharp's television market share in North America was 4.6% in 2015.[35] However Sharp remains the biggest television brand in the Japanese market.[32]

In October 2015 Sharp announced a smartphone that also works as a robot, called RoboHon. It would be sold in 2016 in Japan.[36] Sharp began selling the world's first commercially available TV with a 8K resolution in October 2015.[37] The 85-inch LV-85001 model costs JP¥16 million (US$133,000). Japanese public broadcaster NHK will have test broadcasts at 8K starting 2016, with regular services expected by the time of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.[38][39]

On 25 February 2016, Foxconn announced its intent to acquire a 66% controlling stake in Sharp for 700 billion yen (US$6.24 billion).[40] However, the deal was briefly delayed due to unforeseen financial liabilities; on 30 March 2016, Foxconn announced that it had agreed to pay US$3.5 billion for the stake instead, Foxconn wished to use the purchase to expand into direct-to-consumer product sales rather than serving as a contract manufacturer.[41] In September 2016 Sharp unveiled the Sharp INTELLOS Automated Unmanned Ground Vehicle (A-UGV) at the ASIS International 62nd Annual Seminar and Exhibits (ASIS 2016) in Orlando, Florida.[42]

In March 2017, demolition of Sharp's former headquarters began.[43] On 28 April 2017, Sharp turned its first operating profit in three years, citing the restructuring efforts by Foxconn.[44] In June 2017, Sharp sued its Chinese licensee Hisense for damaging the reputation of its brand, seeking an exit from its licensing agreement. Sharp accused the company of producing "shoddily manufactured" televisions under the Sharp name, including products they believed were in violation of U.S. safety standards for electromagnetic radiation, and the subject of deceptive advertising over their quality. Hisense denied that it engaged in these practices, and stated that it planned to defend itself in court and "will continue to manufacture and sell quality televisions under the Sharp licensed brands."[45][46] In February 2018, Sharp dropped the lawsuit against Hisense.[47][48][49] In 2019 Sharp re-acquired its own brand for use on TV's in the US market.[50][51] In March 2020, in response to the coronavirus pandemic, Sharp announced it would use a TV factory with high-end clean rooms to manufacture surgical masks.[52][53] Sharp acquired the remaining shares of Dynabook from Toshiba in August 2020, making Dynabook Inc. a wholly owned subsidiary of Sharp. Sharp had first purchased Dynabook from Toshiba in 2018.[54]

Products

Sharp J-SH07 mobile phone, 2001 (Japanese market)

Core technologies and products include:

air conditioners, air purifiers, cash registers, CMOS and CCD sensors, and flash memory
.

The first commercial

AQUOS
flat-screen television.

Sharp manufactures consumer electronic products, including

For the business market, Sharp also produces

For the private security industry, Sharp produces an Automated Unmanned Ground Vehicle (A-UGV) named INTELLOS, which utilizes a navigation surveillance platform also developed by Sharp. The system combines automation, mobility, and a variety of monitoring and detection capabilities to extend the impact of a traditional security force.[57]

photovoltaic (PV) solar cells,[58][59] and offers a solar TV.[60] In Q1 2010, the company made the highest revenues from production of solar PV systems.[61]

For the corporate meeting room market, Sharp was the first company to bring the Windows collaboration display to market, which is a 70inch interactive display with built-in unified communication equipment and an IoT sensor hub for measuring environmental room conditions. The Windows collaboration display is conceived to be seamlessly compatible with Microsoft's Office productivity products, as well as make use of the Microsoft Azure cloud services with the IoT sensor hub generated data.[62][63]

Operations

Japan

The Sharp factory in Kameyama, Mie, Japan
The Sharp factory in Taki, Mie, Japan

Net sales for the year 2003 were $16.8 billion. The corporation employs 46,600 staff, of which around half live outside Japan.

It operates from 64 bases in 30 countries and its products are distributed in 164 countries worldwide. Many of its regional subsidiaries trade under the name Sharp Electronics. Sharp was among the Top 100

R&D Spenders in a list published by the IEEE Spectrum magazine in 2002. Sharp's headquarters are at 1 Takumi-chō, Sakai-ku, Sakai, Japan. Until the relocation to Sakai in 2016, the headquarters were in Abeno-ku, Osaka where Hayakawa restarted the business in the 1920s.[64]

Europe

In 2007 Sharp opened a LCD manufacturing plant in Poland.[65] The plant initially manufactured LCD modules using LCD panels imported from Sharp Japan.[66]

In September 2014, Sharp announced that Slovakian electronics company UMC (Universal Media Corporation /Slovakia/ s.r.o.) was acquiring an exclusive brand licence from Sharp and its European television and audio business UMC will also acquire Sharp's Polish factory. As part of the deal, Sharp will support the design and development of televisions sold by UMC under the Sharp brand.[67]

The same month, Sharp also announced a tie-up with Vestel in Europe for white goods. Vestel will sell Sharp-branded white goods (except air conditioners), such as refrigerators and microwave ovens manufactured by Sharp in Thailand and China. Sharp will also license its brand name to Vestel for volume home appliances such as refrigerators, washing machines and ovens. Sharp's remaining European business will then focus on the business-to-business sector including multi-function printers and energy solutions.[buzzword]

In 2017 Sharp acquired a majority (56.7%) shareholding in Skytec UMC, which included the UMC Poland factory.[68]

Factories

  • Poland : Sharp Manufacturing Poland Sp. z o.o., in Toruń, Poland (Europe)
  • Indonesia : Sharp also has a refrigerator manufacturing facility in Karawang, Indonesia, established 2014.[69]
  • Malaysia : Sharp has an export-only Television factory at the HICOM Industrial Park in
    Batu Pahat plant in Johor that manufactures audio-visual Equipment like television sets and Blu-Ray players, and the Sungai Petani plant in Kedah that manufactures radios as well as kitchen appliances like blenders and rice cookers.[71] Formerly there was a plant in Petaling Jaya that manufactured television sets, VCRs, microwave ovens, washing machines and refrigerators, this plant was hit badly by the 1997 Asian financial crisis and shut down as Sharp moved the productions of the appliances to either Batu Pahat (TVs and VCRs) or Sungai Petani (microwave ovens), or out of the country altogether (refrigerators and washing machines) in a bid to reduce operating costs.[72]

Controversies

Antitrust law violations

United States

On 8 November 2008, the

TFT LCD panel for Dell's computer monitors and laptops (2001–2005), Motorola's Razr phones (2005–2006) and Apple's iPod (2005–2006).[75]

Japan

On 18 December 2008,

TFT LCD panels for Nintendo DS and DS-Lite. The fine for Hitachi Displays was waived by JFTC leniency program.[76]

However, Sharp disagreed with the JFTC order and announced it would begin an appeals procedure against it on 2 February 2009.[77] On 31 July 2013, the JFTC dismissed Sharp's appeal.[78]

Environmental record

In November 2011 Sharp was ranked in 11th place by

sustainable operations criteria".[79]

Sharp scored 3/10 and received most of its points on the Products criteria where the company was praised for the energy efficiency of its products with all of its TVs meeting the latest Energy Star standard. It also gained some points for having a relative long term target to reduce CO2 emissions by two percent (per production unit) compared to the previous year, yet sets out no clear target for absolute reductions. The company was also praised for its public support for a clean energy policy, after advocating the Japanese Government to increase the use of renewable energy.[79]

Sharp scored the fewest points in the guide in the Sustainable Operations category, scoring no points for chemical management due to not communicating commitments made on phasing out hazardous substances in its supply chain. The guide also notes that Sharp had lacked any initiative to address the issue of

conflict minerals and the exclusion of paper sourced from suppliers involved in illegal logging or deforestation.[79]

Xinjiang region

In 2020, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute accused at least 82 major brands, including Sharp Corporation, of being connected to forced Uyghur labor in Xinjiang.[80]

Sponsorships

Sharp was the principal sponsor of

Football League Cup, one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, and one UEFA Champions League
title. During 2002/03 and 2003/04 seasons, Sharp was sponsor on .

From 2001 to 2003, Sharp was the main shirt sponsor of Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. in the SFL

In June 2012, Sharp became name sponsor of a

Garmin–Sharp.[83]

In September 2016, Sharp (in conjunction with Altodigital) signed a partnership with Stoke City F.C. for 2 years as an Official Platinum Partner.[84]

Product gallery

  • Sharp 5P-37G boombox
    Sharp 5P-37G boombox
  • Sharp EL-546R scientific calculator
    Sharp EL-546R scientific calculator
  • Sharp CD-S400 Hi-Fi stereo system
    Sharp CD-S400 Hi-Fi stereo system
  • Sharp PC-1251 pocket computer
    Sharp PC-1251 pocket computer
  • Sharp 14C-C1R television
    Sharp 14C-C1R television
  • Sharp Twin Famicom licensed game console for Japanese market (1986)
    Sharp
    Twin Famicom
    licensed game console for Japanese market (1986)
  • X68000 ACE-HD desktop computer for Japanese market (1988)
    X68000 ACE-HD desktop computer for Japanese market (1988)
  • Sharp TV/VCR combo
    Sharp TV/
    VCR
    combo
  • Sharp AQUOS SH-12C mobile phone for Japanese market (2011)
    Sharp AQUOS SH-12C mobile phone for Japanese market (2011)
  • Sharp IC I5352SA in QIP
    Sharp IC I5352SA in QIP

Slogans

  • "New Life Now" (Japan only, 1970s–1985)[85]
  • "New Life People" (Japan only, 1985–1988)
  • "From Sharp Minds Come Sharp Products" (1980s)
  • "Serikan Hidup Anda" (Malaysia only, 1980s–1990s)
  • "Pertama & Satu-Satunya di Indonesia" (English: The First and Only in Indonesia, Indonesia only, 1997–2002)
  • "Pertama & Satu-Satunya di Dunia" (English: The First and Only in the World, Indonesia only, 1997–2002)
  • "Be Sharp" (2002–2016)[86]
  • "Be Original" (2016–present)[87]

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External links