-
Advertisement
BusinessCompanies

Japan’s robots eye car industry to take up smartphone slack

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Robotic chip mounters are seen at Panasonic Factory Solutions. Robotics remains a strength in a Japanese electronics industry that has been hammered by competition from rivals in South Korea and Taiwan. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

As the breakneck growth in the global smartphone market eases, the mostly Japanese companies that make the robots that build the phones are looking to automakers to take up the slack.

Robotics remains a strength in a Japanese electronics industry that has been hammered by competition from rivals in South Korea and Taiwan. Panasonic, Hitachi High-Technologies, Yamaha Motor, Fuji Machine Manufacturing and JUKI Corp together make eight of every 10 component mounting robots.

The quickest of these can mount more than two dozen parts a second, some thinner than a tenth of a millimeter. A line of 10 connected robots can put together 5,000 smartphones a day.

Advertisement

But, as smartphone sales growth slows, the chip mounters are feeling the squeeze.

Sales at Panasonic’s chip mounter business - one of its non-core, but niche market leading divisions at the centre of a revival plan - dropped by a tenth in the year to end-March. The business has around a 30 per cent global market share.

Advertisement

Katsuhiko Omoto, who heads Panasonic’s factory automation unit, sees little prospect for a rebound this year. “We don’t really see big growth,” he told Reuters at the firm’s headquarters outside Tokyo. Around a third of the cabinet-sized machines made there end up in Chinese foundries cranking out Apple Inc iPhones and other mobile devices.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x