Coimbatore: Distribution and supply chain solution company Gati Ltd has tied up with Kintetsu World Express (KWE) of Japan to form Gati-Kintetsu Express Pvt Ltd (Gati-KWE).
While Gati would hold 70 per cent stake in the joint venture, the Japanese partner would hold the rest.
Kintetsu World Express has invested Rs 267.7 crore for its 30 per cent stake, which has been approved by the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB).
Gati said the fund infusion would improve its balance sheet and help reduce the interest outgo.
It hopes that the joint venture would enable “seamless transfer’’ for cross border trade through single window solution to its clients such as Texas Instruments, HP, Panasonic and Toshiba.
"Believer - Humanitarian - Habit of Success" Sukumar Balakrishnan is the Founder of JB GROUP, a 500 Crore National Organization with over 150 Direct & 1200 indirect professionals operating from 5 major cities in India. Jayalakshmi Balakrishnan Group, a multi-faceted group venturing into, E- Commerce and Import-Export (INNOKAIZ), Retail and Wholesale (JB MART), Food and Beverages (KRISHNA FOODS ), Real Estate (Constructions on sites, Interior scaping, Facility Management)
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Showing posts with label Toshiba. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toshiba. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Toshiba introduce 32" LCD television at 20,990 & 19" LCD TV segment at Rs 10,000, triggers LCD TV price war
NEW DELHI: Japanese electronics firm Toshiba has triggered a price war in the flat panel televisions segment by introducing a 32-inchLCD television at 20,990 and entering the 19-inch LCD TV segment at an entry price of 10,000.
The prices are up to 30% less than similar products of rivals like LG, Samsung,Sony and Onida.
"We want to get closer to consumers at the earliest as competition is getting intense,"Toshiba India Director (Digital Products) Wu Tengguo said.
The company wants to lure Indian consumers to replace their traditional cathode ray tube (CRT) television sets with flat-panel LCD televisions, he said. CRT TVs still occupy nearly 60% of the domestic television market.
Toshiba, which sold 30,000 LCD TVs in India last financial year, has set an ambitious target of selling 3 lakh LCD sets and acquire close to 10% market share this year.
Sony,LG andSamsung currently dominate Indian flat-panel TV market.
Samsung India Deputy MD R Zutshi said any price war will not last long. "There is certainly a scope for companies to experiment with new sizes as LCD TV penetration is still very low. However, the price war is not going to continue for long as prices have already touched the bottom," Zutshi said.
Korean firms LG and Samsung-which together account for almost half of the market share across key product categories such as TV, refrigerators, washing machines and ACs-sell entry-level 32-inch LCD TV at 29,990, while homegrown brandOnida sells it for 23,490.
Even more significant could be Toshiba's entry into the 19-inch LCD TV segment at 10,000. Half of the three million flat-panel televisions sold in the country in 2010 were 19-26 inches in size.
Toshiba will soon start making LCD TVs in India , Tengguo said.
Toshiba's aggressive move is another example for Japanese companies' recent efforts to increase market share in India, which they lost to Korean rivals in late 1990s and early 2000s, mainly due to their premium pricing.
The prices are up to 30% less than similar products of rivals like LG, Samsung,Sony and Onida.
"We want to get closer to consumers at the earliest as competition is getting intense,"Toshiba India Director (Digital Products) Wu Tengguo said.
The company wants to lure Indian consumers to replace their traditional cathode ray tube (CRT) television sets with flat-panel LCD televisions, he said. CRT TVs still occupy nearly 60% of the domestic television market.
Toshiba, which sold 30,000 LCD TVs in India last financial year, has set an ambitious target of selling 3 lakh LCD sets and acquire close to 10% market share this year.
Sony,LG andSamsung currently dominate Indian flat-panel TV market.
Samsung India Deputy MD R Zutshi said any price war will not last long. "There is certainly a scope for companies to experiment with new sizes as LCD TV penetration is still very low. However, the price war is not going to continue for long as prices have already touched the bottom," Zutshi said.
Korean firms LG and Samsung-which together account for almost half of the market share across key product categories such as TV, refrigerators, washing machines and ACs-sell entry-level 32-inch LCD TV at 29,990, while homegrown brandOnida sells it for 23,490.
Even more significant could be Toshiba's entry into the 19-inch LCD TV segment at 10,000. Half of the three million flat-panel televisions sold in the country in 2010 were 19-26 inches in size.
Toshiba will soon start making LCD TVs in India , Tengguo said.
Toshiba's aggressive move is another example for Japanese companies' recent efforts to increase market share in India, which they lost to Korean rivals in late 1990s and early 2000s, mainly due to their premium pricing.
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