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    LG now sets sights on vehicle parts, AI

    For its main home appliance and TV businesses, LG is expected to utilize mobile unit workforces to provide better Internet of Things (IoT) and customer-care platforms as well as smart home services.

    LG now sets sights on vehicle parts, AI
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    Leaving its ill-fated mobile business behind, LG Electronics will zero in on bolstering promising sectors, like vehicle components, connected devices and artificial intelligence (AI), industry observers said on Monday, hoping that the segments will fill the hole left by its money-losing unit.

    LG decided to pull out from the mobile phone business after years of dismal performance.

    The company's mobile communications (MC) division has been in the red since the second quarter of 2015, and its accumulated operating losses reached 5 trillion won ($4.4 billion) last year.

    Indeed, LG Electronics, which started in 1995, had been one of the top players in the global mobile phone sector, once becoming the world's third-largest handset maker.

    Analysts pointed out LG's late entry to the smartphone market and its audacious approach led to the demise of its mobile business, reports Yonhap news agency.

    LG first entered the smartphone market in 2010 with Optimus after Apple paved the way with the iPhone in 2007.

    "The market share of LG smartphones has continued to decline after reaching about 4 percent in the second quarter of 2017," Lim Su-jeong, an analyst at Counterpoint Research, said. "It has been below 2 per cent since the third quarter of 2019."

    Sandwiched by Apple and Samsung in the premium segment, and Chinese players in the budget phone sector, LG has been striving to make a turnaround in its mobile business in recent years.

    To reduce costs, the company shifted its smartphone production base to Vietnam while expanding outsourcing deals.

    LG also placed its bet last year on the Explorer Project, its new mobile category highlighted by a different form factor, and released the Wing, a rotating dual-screen smartphone.

    However, such efforts were not enough for the company to break away from its extended slump.

    Although its smartphone business came to a bitter end, LG Electronics aims to use its assets and know-how from the mobile business for the growth of the company's other businesses.

    LG has previously said it is looking for ways to "internalize" and use its core mobile technologies to create synergy with its other businesses, such as electric vehicle components, connected devices, smart homes, robotics and AI.

    Though there will be no production of handsets after end-May, LG said research and development (R&D) activities in the mobile sector will continue.

    The company, which boasts around 24,000 patents regarding 4G and 5G technologies, is now setting its sights on securing 6G telecommunications solutions that are critical to the era of Ambient Internet of Everything (AIoE) where everything is virtually connected.

    LG's vehicle components solutions (VS) division, created in 2013, has been in the red for the past five years, but the company expects to make a turnaround this year and predicts the unit's sales will expand through 2024 with average annual growth of 15 percent.

    For its main home appliance and TV businesses, LG is expected to utilize mobile unit workforces to provide better Internet of Things (IoT) and customer-care platforms as well as smart home services.

    The company has also been trying to expand the ecosystem of its LG ThinQ IoT platform via partnerships with other tech firms and even food companies.

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