An incident in which a notebook battery exploded and caught fire is unlikely
to have any lasting impact on manufacturer
LG
Electronics, analysts in Korea believe.
The share prices of LG Electronics and affiliated battery maker
LG
Chemical fell last week after Korean TV channels broadcast
video
of the event. Neither share price has returned to its previous level.
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"LG Chemical's share price plummeted on 9 January, weighed down by an
incident involving the explosion of one of its rechargeable batteries," said
Hyundai
Securities analyst Daeyong Park in a briefing to investors shortly after the
event.
"Given the tight supply of cylinder-type batteries for notebook computers,
however, the incident is not likely to lead to a suspension of production and a
recall that would result in large-scale losses."
The video appears to show an LG Electronics notebook PC in flames after its
battery overheated.
The incident was not serious for LG Electronics, Korean analysts said,
because notebook PCs are a relatively minor product line for the company at
fewer than 750,000 annually.
LG Chemical is one of the world's five largest rechargeable battery
manufacturers, with a market share of approximately 10 per cent by shipment
volume. Market leader
Sanyo holds
almost a third of the global market.
LG ships 20 to 30 million rechargeable battery cells per month. The company
has doubled its output over the past two years, achieving a significantly faster
growth rate than its larger Japanese competitors.
LG's battery division was expected to help drive a recovery in profits at the
company in 2008, according to a report published by
Korea
Investment and Securities Co in November.
The cylindrical lithium ion batteries have an operating profit margin of 15
per cent, according to Hyundai Securities.
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