Sunday December 30, 12:24 PM
Hitachi seen to exit small hard drive business
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TOKYO (Reuters) - Hitachi Ltd , Japan's biggest
electronics conglomerate, plans to exit the business of making
small hard disk drives as demand shifts to flash memory chips,
the Nikkei business daily reported on Sunday.
Hitachi's hard drive unit, Hitachi Global Storage
Technologies Inc, has already stopped production of 1-inch hard
drives and plans to stop shipping 1.8-inch drives around next
summer, the newspaper said.
The Nikkei also said Hitachi rival Fujitsu Ltd has
given up on plans to enter the market for small drives. Fujitsu
had been developing 1.8-inch drives with U.S.-based Cornice
with plans to bring a product to market in 2007.
No one at Hitachi or Fujitsu could be reached for comment.
Small hard drives are increasingly being replaced by flash
memory chips as the memory storage device in video cameras and
portable music players such as Apple Inc's popular
iPod as flash memory capacity improves and prices come down.
Hitachi will focus on 2.5-inch and 3.5-drives, anticipating
strong demand for the bigger drives that are used in personal
computers and digital electronics such as DVD recorders, the
Nikkei said.
The move comes as Hitachi considers selling a stake in its
loss-making hard drive business to bring in fresh capital and
expertise.
Hitachi has not once posted a profit in its hard drive
business since buying it from IBM for $2 billion in
2002.
Toshiba Corp is the largest maker of 1.8-inch hard
drives with a market share of about 70 percent, followed by
Hitachi at 17 percent, South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co
at 8 percent and U.S.-based Seagate Technology
at 5 percent, the Nikkei said, citing data from
research firm iSuppli.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne)
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