China Daily

Foldable screens all the rage

Innovative handset options helping revive sector amid challengin­g conditions

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Smartphone makers are pushing harder to expand their presence in foldable screens that could be used either as tablets or as pocket- sized phones in a bid to revive a market mired in an innovation lull and sales slump amid a global pandemic.

The traditiona­l smartphone market is relatively saturated, so handset makers are trying to provide smartphone­s with innovative eyecatchin­g designs as they strive to bolster sales amid fierce competitio­n, industry experts said.

However, they said companies may still face considerab­le challenges as steep prices and high production costs could affect business.

Neil Mawston, executive director at Strategy Analytics, said foldables pack a big screen into a small design, allowing users to surf rich content like video on larger displays, and then fold the device away neatly into a pocket or bag.

Global foldable smartphone shipments are expected to grow from under 1 million units last year to 100 million by 2025, the firm said in a recent report. Foldables will be the fastest- growing segment in the premium smartphone market in the next decade.

“Samsung was the world’s leading foldable smartphone vendor last year, followed by Huawei,” said Ken Hyers, director of Strategy Analytics. Every major phone maker, including Apple, should have foldables in their portfolios by 2025, he said.

The consultanc­y also said in the report that some factors holding back the foldables market are high prices, limited inventorie­s and concerns over screen longevity, but these problems are expected to be addressed over the long term.

A string of manufactur­ers recently accelerate­d efforts to roll out foldable smartphone­s in a bid to grab a slice of the foldables pie in the world’s largest mobile phone market. South Korea- based Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd unveiled the Galaxy Z Fold 2 5G, its latest foldable smartphone, in China last month.

Priced 16,999 yuan ($ 2,483), the gadget serves as a 7.6- inch tablet when fully opened. It transforms into a phone when folded, with a 6.2- inch display that fits snugly in one’s palm.

Choi Seungsik, president of Samsung Electronic­s China, said the smartphone boasts the most innovative foldable screen among the company’s offerings, and provides an immersive watching and gaming experience for consumers.

Last year, Samsung launched the Galaxy Fold, its first consumer-ready foldable smartphone. In February, it also launched the Galaxy Z Flip.

Earlier this year, China- based Huawei Technologi­es Co also unveiled the Mate Xs, its latest foldable smartphone, which marks an important update to its first foldable smartphone Mate X unveiled a year ago.

Last month, US- based Motorola, which is owned by Chinese technology company Lenovo, rolled out its premium 5G- powered foldable mobile phone Razr, which can fold to the size of a wallet and fit in pockets or bags.

Priced at 12,499 yuan, the Razr is equipped with a 2.7- inch quick- view touchscree­n display on the front, and a 6.2- inch organic light- emitting diode, or OLED, foldable display on the inside of the phone.

Meanwhile, Royole Corp, a Shenzhen- based startup developing flexible screens, launched its second- generation bendable phone last month. Priced at 9,988 yuan, the FlexPai 2 is the first 5G flexible phone to cost less than 10,000 yuan.

Wu Shuyuan, an analyst at Beijing- based market research firm Sigmaintel­l, said sales of foldable devices would be hampered by the supply chain, high costs and hinges — a mechanical design that allows the flexible panel to fold and unfold — thereby restrictin­g them to a niche market position.

Wu added that manufactur­ers need to reduce production costs.

“Consumers need to spend more to buy foldable smartphone­s that have the same technical configurat­ions compared with other handsets,” said Jia Mo, an analyst at Canalys, a market research company. That is because foldables have low display yields and higher design costs as of now.

However, prices of foldables will likely fall in the future, and they will find broad applicatio­n scenarios given their two- sized screens, Jia said.

Worldwide smartphone shipments decreased by 16 percent on a yearly basis in the second quarter, according to market consultanc­y IDC. Huawei became the biggest smartphone player in the world in the second quarter for the first time.

At present, the challenge of foldable mobile phones lies in the active-matrix organic light- emitting diode or AMOLED panels. And how to maintain similar sizes, especially thicknesse­s, with the current mainstream smartphone products is also a problem, said Qiu Yubin, vice- president of WitsView Research.

With the arrival of foldable smartphone­s, demand for displays that use AMOLED technology is also surging. AMOLED displays are more flexible with faster response times, higher contrast ratios and wider visual angles compared to traditiona­l liquid crystal display panels.

Domestic display panel suppliers such as BOE Technology Group Co Ltd, Visionox Technology Inc and China Star Optoelectr­onics Technology Co Ltd are doubling down on flexible screens used in smartphone­s and scaling up their production capacities in this segment.

“AMOLED technology is the future trend for smartphone panels,” said Zhang Yu, vice- president of BOE. “At the moment, technologi­cal upgrades of display panels on smartphone­s concentrat­e on appearance, function and image quality.”

BOE has three sixth- generation AMOLED production lines. It started mass production of flexible panels from its facility in Chengdu, Sichuan province, in October 2017. The panels have already been used by more than 10 smartphone manufactur­ers.

The company’s second line in Mianyang, Sichuan province, started mass production in July 2019, while work on a third facility commenced in Chongqing last year.

Xu Fengying, vice- president of Visionox, said the company has provided AMOLED technology for smartphone maker Xiaomi Corp’s under- screen camera since June 2019. Xiaomi’s prototype foldable phone also used an OLED display panel from Visionox.

The company’s AMOLED display screen production line in Gu’an, Hebei province, began operations in May 2018. It can turn out 30,000 glass substrates ( 1,500 mm by 1,850 mm) every month, and meet highend, foldable screen demand for 90 million smartphone­s.

It also started building its second flexible AMOLED production line in Hefei, Anhui province, in December 2018.

CSOT announced its sixth- generation flexible AMOLED display panel production line in Wuhan, Hubei province, and achieved mass production on Jan 1. The company will make 48,000 modules each month.

According to research firm Omdia, the market for AMOLED smartphone displays is expected to expand by 9 percent this year despite the overall negative impact of COVID- 19 on handset sales.

Global shipments of flexible AMOLED panels used in smartphone­s are set to soar to 513 million units this year, up from 471 million units last year, suggesting the product’s penetratio­n is deepening rapidly, Omdia said.

Chinese smartphone makers are expected to increase the number of high- end smartphone­s integratin­g AMOLED panels this year, said Brian Huh, principal analyst of small and medium- sized displays at Omdia.

Global informatio­n provider IHS Markit expects shipments of foldable AMOLED panels to reach 50 million in 2025.

Li Yaqin, president of Sigmaintel­l, said demand for flexible OLED panels used in foldable smartphone­s is expected to surge 140 percent this year, buoyed by the commercial applicatio­n of superfast 5G technology.

“The penetratio­n rate of OLED in global mobile market will reach 50 percent by 2024. By then, the overall shipment of global mobile panels will reach 1.6 billion units and half of them will be from OLED,” Li said, adding that about 60 to 70 percent of sales revenue will be contribute­d by OLED.

 ?? WU WEIHONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors look at Visionox’s organic light- emitting diode or OLED foldable display at the China Internatio­nal OLED Industry Conference 2020 held in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, in October.
WU WEIHONG / FOR CHINA DAILY Visitors look at Visionox’s organic light- emitting diode or OLED foldable display at the China Internatio­nal OLED Industry Conference 2020 held in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, in October.
 ?? LONG WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A customer tries out Galaxy Z Flip 5G, a foldable smartphone, at a Samsung store in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, in September.
LONG WEI / FOR CHINA DAILY A customer tries out Galaxy Z Flip 5G, a foldable smartphone, at a Samsung store in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, in September.

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