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Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

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    LG Display Q2 seen surging but LCD outlook dimmer

    SEOUL
    Fri Jul 4, 2008 3:00pm EDT

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    Workers at an LG booth set up a display featuring the 50PG60 television, a 50-inch 1080p plasma TV with a single layer design, as they prepare for the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada January 6, 2008. REUTERS/Steve Marcus

    SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korean flat screen maker LG Display Co (034220.KS) and two smaller Taiwanese rivals are set to post profits for the second quarter that more than trebled thanks to strong demand for TVs and tight supplies of PC panels.

    Technology  |  Stocks  |  Global Markets  |  China

    But a global economic slowdown that threatens to depress consumer spending and falling prices of liquid crystal display panels will slow growth in the coming quarters.

    "Earnings have peaked in the second quarter," said James Kim, an analyst at Lehman Brothers. "Demand to replace TVs with flat-screen models is still there, but fewer consumers are buying large-size TVs because of the weak economy."

    Analysts had widely expected a downturn to hit the sector at the end of the year, but they say that slowdown could come sooner and lead to a longer-than-expected slump.

    Taiwan's top LCD makers, AU Optronics Corp (2409.TW) and Chi Mei Optoelectronics Corp (3009.TW), are considering cutting output to stabilize prices, the Commercial Times reported this week.

    Drastic investment cuts last year helped the LCD industry enjoy strong earnings in the first half of this year, as tight supply kept pricing stable at a time when sales are usually slow.

    But demand from the United States and Europe has slowed due to the weakening economy, although smaller sizes remain popular in emerging markets such as China.

    And even in China, recent disasters such as heavy winter snow and the May earthquake have hurt sales and disappointed some who had expected the entire nation to snap up sleek LCD TVs ahead of the Beijing Olympics.

    LG Display (LPL.N), the world's second-biggest LCD panel maker, is forecast to report next Wednesday a 752 billion won ($725 million) net profit in the second quarter to June 30, according to 10 analysts surveyed by Reuters.

    That would mark a sharp increase from 228 billion won earned in the year-earlier period and higher than 717 billion won in the first quarter.

    Second-quarter sales are expected to come in at 4.38 trillion won, up from 3.36 trillion won a year earlier, according to Reuters Estimates.

    The company's average panel price likely fell about 5 percent in the second quarter from January-March, analysts said. Average panel prices fell 2.6 percent in the first quarter.

    LG Display trails domestic rival Samsung Electronics Co (005930.KS) but ranks ahead of AU (AUO.N), the world's No. 3.

    AU is expected to post on July 24 a second-quarter net profit of T$24.61 billion ($810 million), up sharply from T$5.99 billion a year ago, according to Reuters Estimates. The estimate is lower than T$26.99 billion earned in the previous quarter.

    Smaller Taiwanese maker Chi Mei is set to report on July 31 a T$14.99 billion net profit for the April-June quarter against T$3.39 billion a year earlier, Reuters Estimates showed. Chi Mei posted T$15.29 billion in net profit in the first quarter.

    FALLING PRICES

    Reflecting weaker demand, LCD panel prices began sliding in June and analysts say inventory is building up.

    "Key clients such as Dell (DELL.O) and Acer (2353.TW) stopped making new orders in June," said Lee Min-hee, an analyst at Dongbu Securities. "Price falls will be even deeper in July."

    Further weighing on the sector's outlook, some nine new production lines from leading LCD makers in South Korea, Taiwan and Japan are scheduled to start operating next year.

    "The industry downturn should continue over the next year," Lehman's Kim said.

    Research firm iSuppli expects the market for large-sized LCD panels, used in TVs, monitors and notebook computers, to grow 19.9 percent this year to $88.9 billion, but the forecast is far slower than a 37.5 percent increase in 2007.

    Meanwhile, LG Display is expected to more than double its net profit in 2008 to 2.94 trillion won, Reuters Estimates showed. While the figures are still positive, they could very well be revised down as concerns grow over the second-half performance.

    Shares in LG Display, worth about $13 billion in market value, fell 11.8 percent in the second quarter against a 1.7 percent loss in the broader market as the industry's outlook dims.

    (Additional reporting by Park Ju-min in Seoul and Baker Li in TAIPEI; Editing by Marie-France Han and Louise Heavens)



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