/ 07.28.2010 12:00AM
DisplaySearch Expects 3.4 Million 3DTVs to Ship in 2010
SANTA CLARA, CALIF.: DisplaySearch forecasts 3.4 million 3DTVs
will be shipped this year, with shipments reaching 42.9 million in just four
years.
“Based on this forecast, 3D TV market penetration is expected to grow from
a 5 percent share of total flat panel TVs in 2010 to 37 percent in 2014,”
DisplaySearch said in its latest quarterly report.
“TV manufacturers have managed to launch products very rapidly,” Paul Gray of
DisplaySearch said. “We have seen a full range of 3DTVs in sizes from 40-
to 63-inches already available, and without a doubt, there will be another wave
of new products at the IFA show in Berlin in September.”
Only Samsung and Panasonic launched 3DTVs during the first half of 2010, DisplaySearch’s
Paul Gagnon said.
“Based on early indications, the launch of 3DTVs is similar to Samsung’s
rollout of LED LCD TVs at the beginning of 2009, albeit at a slightly
slower pace,” Gagnon said. “This would be in line with our forecast of just over 2 million
3DTVs shipped in North America for 2010.”
The 2 million forecast is in line with one recently issued by the Consumer
Electronics Association, which predicted a U.S. 3DTV shipment tally of 2.1
million for 2010.
DisplaySearch said that despite the anticipated growth in 3DTV shipments, the
electronics industry is running ahead of available content.

“3D content for TV remains limited to a small number of movies, plus some
sports events on pay TV, which are dependent on cable providers,” the firm
said. “Blockbuster movies in 3D, such as ‘Avatar,’ will not be available for
3D TV in 2010. In addition, the low penetration of Blu-ray players, and
especially HD broadcasts, outside of North America and Japan affects content
availability. Consumers may be tempted to wait for the ecosystem to develop in
order to have enough material to watch. This, coupled with other significant
obstacles for 3D implementation in the home, like consumer perceptions of 3D
glasses, remain unresolved.”
Other factors, such as LED backlighting, affect consumer satisfaction,
DisplaySearch said.
“The loss in light output from 3D has made display efficiency a key attention
point again,” Gray said. “Otherwise, a new generation of power-hungry 3D sets
could return the industry back to where it started in energy consumption.”
--Deborah D. McAdams
See...
July 22, 2010: “CEA Now Expects 2.1
Million 3DTVs to Ship in 2010”
U.S. shipments of 3D displays is forecast to reach to 2.1 million this
year. Related revenues will top $2.7 billion.