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Flexible AMOLED display overcapacity is looming, predicts IHS Markit

Flexible AMOLED display overcapacity is looming, predicts IHS Markit

Technology News |
By Julien Happich



In 2016, flexible capacity, or factories with the ability to produce AMOLEDs on plastic substrates, only accounted for 28 percent of total capacity targeting mobile applications. This will increase to 80 percent by 2020 as almost every new Gen 6 fab and smaller factory built over the next four years will be flexible compatible, according to the company’s Display Supply Demand & Equipment Tracker report.

Between 2016 and 2020, IHS Markit expects China, Japan and South Korea to build the equivalent of 46 new flexible AMOLED fabs, whose monthly capacity will reach 30,000 substrates, each. These fabs will add 18.6 million square meters of new plastic substrate production capability, more than 13 times the industry’s current level.

“All of the new capacity will facilitate a rapid increase in flexible AMOLED panel adoption in smartphones,” explains Charles Annis, senior director at IHS Markit.

“Nevertheless, as so much new flexible capacity is being added, it is starting to raise concerns that the market will not be able to absorb all of the potential output.”

IHS Markit forecasts that the tight AMOLED panel supply in 2016 will continually give way to a growing capacity-based glut. The supply is predicted to exceed demand by more than 45 percent in 2020, when 40 percent of smartphones will adopt AMOLED panels.


“AMOLED displays will offer excellent image quality and form factor advantages in high-end phones. Despite excessive capacity availability, the challenge to faster adoption will be costs,” Annis said. High manufacturing costs for most makers will keep average rigid AMOLED panel prices 40 percent above equivalent LCD panels, while flexible AMOLED panel prices will remain 100 percent higher. “Smartphone makers, targeting mid and low-end market segments, may want to buy flexible AMOLED panels, but are likely to be restricted by lingering high prices.”  

To absorb all the new capacity in the pipeline, flexible AMOLED panels will need to expand the market beyond smartphones to tablet PCs, notebooks and new form factors enabled by foldable displays.

Ultimately, the rapid growth of flexible AMOLED capacity and the resulting increase in panel production will help to lower costs, increase yields and improve quality. In the long-run, this will spur further adoption into more applications; however, to get there, the industry may first need to cycle through a difficult period of digesting the 46 new flexible fabs now being built.

IHS Markit – www.ihsmarkit.com

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