Monday, February 18, 2008

Toshiba shares surge on expected HD-DVD exit

Shares in Toshiba jumped 6 per cent in Tokyo on speculation that the Japanese electronics giant it is about to abandon its HD-DVD standard of next-generation DVDs.

Toshiba confirmed today that it is considering exiting the high-definition DVD business in the wake of a host of media reports that it is primed to concede defeat to Sony’s Blu-ray DVD format.

On Friday, Wal-Mart, the world’s largest retailer, announced that it would no longer stock Toshiba’s HD-DVD disks and players in favour of Blu-ray.

Reuters has reported that Toshiba is in the final stage of planning its exit, citing company sources.
Blu-ray, HD DVD and the phoney war

There is nothing more dull than a format war. How much should we really care about prettier TV pictures anyway?
Related Links

* Toshiba risks defeat against Sony's Blu-ray

* Paramount’s switch to Blu-ray could end HD DVD

* Blu-Ray takes inside edge in war with HD-DVD

Confirmation of the HD-DVD format review – alongside news that Toshiba will build two new NAND flash memory plants – was welcomed by investors. Toshiba’s shares were trading 5.7 per cent higher at 829 yen (£3.29) after the news.

The “Wal-Mart effect” and a series of crushing setbacks in Hollywood have left Toshiba facing defeat in its format war with Sony for domination of home entertainment.

A possible decision by Toshiba to pull out of its HD-DVD standard of next-generation DVDs would effectively end the battle with Sony’s Blu-ray discs after only a year of serious retail competition.

Paramount remains the largest of the big American studios still loyal to the HD-DVD format, but members of the HD-DVD consortium, which is the 135-strong corporate alliance formed to promote the Toshiba format of next-generation DVDs, told The Times that they expected the group’s “total collapse” within the next few weeks.

Toshiba’s expected withdrawal will leave millions of consumers around the world as disappointed backers of a “dead format” — with fledgeling high definition film collections on HD-DVD that will now expand no further.

The decision will also deal heavy blows to the largest corporate backers of HD-DVD, particularly Microsoft. The software giant, which competes directly with Sony in games consoles, has been the staunchest defender of the Toshiba format.

Toshiba is understood to have poured more than $2 billion (£1 billion) into developing and promoting HD-DVD, a figure thought to include the cost of offering sweeteners to various Hollywood studios for exclusivity agreements on content.

— Microsoft will announce a deal with Paramount today to supply high- definition films on demand for users of its Xbox 360 games console. The service, which will go live in the UK and Ireland tomorrow evening, allows owners of Xbox 360 consoles with high-speed internet connections to rent selected Paramount releases at a cost of around £2 for DVD standard films or £3.20 for high-definition.

The rental terms are “14:24” — the customer can view the film for 14 days, but once viewing starts it must be completed within 24 hours. At the end of the rental term the film deletes itself from the Xbox 360’s built-in hard drive. Paramount is the second big studio to join the Xbox Live distribution network after Warner Brothers.

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