Philips Says GoodBye To Consumer Electronics

Philips, which has become primarily a maker of medical equipment and lighting products, has sold the audio, video, multimedia and accessories activities to the Japan’s Funai Electric Co. for the almost token sum of €150 million ($201.8 million) in cash and a brand-license fee.

Philips finally gave up its long history as a consumer electronics company after failing to keep up with the competition given by the likes of Apple, Samsung, Sony, etc. The move brings to an end more than 80 years of often innovative but increasingly lackluster investment in consumer electronics.

Despite steadily reducing its exposure to consumer electronics over the years, exiting the television and mobile-phone segments along the way, Philips has struggled to generate sufficiently larger profits from the business as is evident from their Q4 announcements. Philips said its fourth-quarter net loss was €358 million compared with a €162 million loss in the fourth quarter of 2011 and warned that it expects a slow start to its sales this year.

“Our consumer lifestyle business was margin dilutive to the group, so it was time to decide to move away from consumer electronics,” said Frans van Houten, Philips’s chief executive.

“Since we have online entertainment, people do not buy Blu-ray and DVD players anymore,” Mr. Van Houten said.

Philips is becoming more efficient, Mr. Van Houten said. Philips has introduced new products to market 40% more quickly than in the past.

Philips said it is sticking to its 2013 targets. The group is aiming for revenue growth of 4% to 6% and a 10% to 12% margin for earnings before interest, tax and amortization. Philips said sales from its healthcare division generated 40% of group revenue in the fourth quarter, with consumer lifestyle contributing 26% and lighting, which was loss making before earnings, interest and tax, making up 32%.

Team TechPanda

View Comments

  • This is sad, Philips was my favorite consumer electronics company, they were the one to come up with really quality products. If consumer electronics section is gone, then i am not sure what they are coming up with, because even their computer accessories are not popular.

    • Well, like they say, they are going to focus on the healthcare segment which currently gives them around 40% of their revenue.

      It is sad, no doubt.

Recent Posts

The year trust broke: How cyberattacks in 2025 escaped the screen & hit the real world

In 2025, cybercrime stopped looking like a technical problem and started behaving like a systemic…

2 days ago

India to develop world’s highest-power hydrogen-fueled locomotive in NTPC Rail Project

India is currently conducting trial runs for its first hydrogen-powered train, which is scheduled for…

2 days ago

Funding alert: Tech startups that raked in moolah this month

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent funding events in the tech ecosystem, seeking…

3 days ago

Microsoft’s Unified XDR is the future of security operations

The modern enterprise security landscape is getting more complex by the day, with organizations facing…

4 days ago

Building India 2026: How govt. & industry are co-creating the nation’s infrastructure backbone

As India steps into 2026, infrastructure development is no longer just about concrete, steel, and…

5 days ago

Geek Appeal: New gadgets & apps on the block

The Tech Panda takes a look at recently launched gadgets & apps in the market.…

5 days ago