Posted on 10/06/2012 3:20:43 AM PDT by Las Vegas Dave
Another day, another set of Black Friday predictions from a web site that tracks online and retail deals. This time it's from DealNews.com and the site is making some bold forecasts for prices on HDTVs on the big shopping day.
For instance, says DealNews.com, you can expect that 42-inch 1080p LCD HDTVs will be available for $189. (The web site, GottaDeal.com, earlier this week predicted that 42-inch,1080p HDTVs will go for $349 on Black Friday.).
DealNews predicts that 32-inch,1080p LCD HDTVs will be available for $159 on the big day and 47-inch, 1080p LCD HDTVs will go for as low as $299.
"With 42" sets bottoming out at $189, 46" and 47" HDTVs are the new "entry level" TVs, giving retailers plenty of room to slash prices. We're thus doubling down and predicting that this size category, like 42" last year, will see the most aggressive deals this November," the site writes.
Moving to larger-screen sets, DealNews.com says 55-inch, 1080p LCD HDTV will be available for $499 while 3D versions of the 55-inch set will be priced at $789. The site sees 60-inch, 1080p LCD HDTVs going for $719 while Plasma 60-inch, 1080p sets will be available for $569.
And if you're concerned that the low prices will only be available on generic brands, DealNews.com has this to say:
"Keep in mind that there are very few third-tier 60" HDTVs sold anymore, so the deals you'll find will be on brand-name sets from the likes of Samsung, LG, and Sharp."
For background, retailers traditionally offer deep discounts on the day after Thanksgiving, better known as Black Friday, the unofficial start of the holiday shopping season. (Black Friday this year will be November 23.)
The discount prices are often available for one day only -- and may include restrictions on time and supply. Discount hunters also have to contend with the frenzied atmosphere of Black Friday which some shoppers view as a day of combat.
DealNews.com also predicts that Blu-ray players with Wi-Fi built-in will be had for $39 while 3D versions will be $59.
(Black Friday predictions.from GottaDeal.com.)
Interested in the HDTV ping list?
Please Freepmail me (freepmail works best) if you would like your name added to the HDTV ping list,
(approximately 375+ freepers are currently on the HDTV ping list).
The pinged subjects can be HDTV technology, satellite, cable, OTA HD reception (Over The Air with roof top or indoor antennas), Broadcast specials, Sports, Blu Ray/HDDVD, and any and all subjects relating to HDTV.
Note: if you search Freerepublic using the keyword "HDTV, you will find most of the past HDTV postings.
LasVegasDave.
Thankfully, I don’t need another TV. But if I did, that would be an attractive offer.
Standing in line at midnight and then getting trampled by a mob ain’t worth it to me......at any price. Call me crazy.
Standing in line at midnight and then getting trampled by a mob ain’t worth it to me......at any price. Call me crazy.
That’ll be a sale! :’)
We’ve started going to Churchill Downs on Black Friday and watching the horses. Beats the heck out of going to malls!
You're crazy!
Look at it as kind of an adventure. Like being in Pamplona Spain for the running of the bulls.......LOL!
Hmmm...maybe I can pick up a couple of those for replacement computer monitors...
Look at it as kind of an adventure. Like being in Pamplona Spain for the running of the bulls.......LOL!
I get up at four in the morning, stay on the side streets and still pick up some good deals and have fun doing it.
Mostly it means staying out of Wal-Mart.
Are Plasma TV’s any good?
Thank you for the ping.
(HDTV Ping list members note: this will be my Black Friday thread for 2012, I will add BF bargains/news/updates/etc. to this thread.)
http://www.tvpredictions.com/isuppli101912.htm
Holiday 2012: Big Bargains For TVs, Gadgets?
Washington, D.C. (October 19, 2012) — The holiday shopping predictions continue to stream in and all are saying that retailers will offer big discounts on TVs and other gadgets.
Research firm IHS iSuppli is the latest to weigh in with predictions that include 42-inch, 1080p LCD TVs available for under $200; 55-inch LCD TVs with 3D capability slashed from $1,400 to $800 and Blu-ray players available for under $40.
iSuppli says the discounts will be required to lure consumers who are still struggling to survive in today’s down economy.
“Amid weak economic conditions, along with a lack of compelling new products, electronics brands have little choice but to slash prices to gain the attention of buyers,” iSuupli said in a statement. “While consumer electronics brands and retailers always offer bargains for Black Friday, this year is likely to bring extremely steep price declines.”
iSuppli said the deals mentioned above will “get shoppers out on Black Friday.”
Retailers traditionally offer deep discounts on the day after Thanksgiving, better known as Black Friday, the unofficial start of the holiday shopping season. (Black Friday this year will be November 23.) But many analysts believe that online and retail stores will continue to offer low prices throughout the holiday season.
In other holiday predictions, DealNews has said that 32-inch,1080p LCD HDTVs will be available for $159 on Black Friday while 47-inch, 1080p LCD HDTVs will go for as low as $299.
GottaDeal.com says that 720p 42-inch sets will likely be available for as low as $249 with 47-inch and 50-inch LCD and LED models available for around $399 and $449 respectively.
Get them before the EPA bans them.
"May 17 2008 "We can't drive our SUVs and, you know, eat as much as we want and keep our homes on, you know, 72 degrees at all times, whether we're living in the desert or we're living in the tundra, and then just expect every other country is going to say OK"
New Senate Report Reveals Economic Pain of Obama-EPA Regulations Put on Hold Until After the Election
http://epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Minority.PressReleases&ContentRecord_id=743423ef-07b0-4db2-bced-4b0d9e63f84b
FYI
After peaking in 2011, global television shipments are expected to decline by 5.4 percent in 2012 as growth in the liquid crystal display (LCD) market stalls, marking the first decrease since the widespread commercialization of flat-panels, according to a new IHS iSuppli Worldwide Television Market Tracker Report from information and analytics provider IHS.
Television shipments reached an all-time high of 255 million units in 2011 but will decline to 241 million this year, the first contraction to occur since IHS iSuppli started tracking televisions. After years of double-digit-percentage increases, LCD TV shipments in 2012 will be flat compared to 2011.
The large drop in volume is due to decreased TV shipments into Japan, down from 19.8 million units in 2011 to just 7.5 million units in 2012, following the end of government subsidies for eco-friendly consumer electronics. Not counting Japan, global TV shipments are set to remain broadly the same in 2012, with growth in developing TV markets like Latin America and the Middle East-Africa offset by the small decline in North America and Europe.
Meanwhile, shipments this year of legacy cathode ray tube televisions (CRT TVs) and plasma display panel televisions (PDP TVs) will continue to fall precipitously. CRT TV volumes will slide from 25.5 million in 2011 to 15.8 million this year, while PDP TV shipments will retreat to 8.9 million in 2012, down from 13.9 million last year.
Growth will return to the television market in 2014. Once this stabilization occurs, the year 2015 will see global shipments return to growth, and sales will rise in countries such as Brazil, India and Indonesia.
By 2017, IHS forecasts 282 million TVs will be shipped worldwide, far more than the current peak in 2011.
CRT TVs to be non-existent by 2015
One of the major reasons for the decline in unit shipments is the continued fall of CRT TVs. This is not a surprise given the long-term decline of the market, but it is having an impact on the overall shipment of televisions and causing a period of adjustment. By 2016, CRT TV technology will become nonexistent as all regions switch to LCD and organic light-emitting diode (OLED) technology, IHS iSuppli believes.
Currently, there are no CRT TVs being shipped in Western Europe, North America and Japan. Eastern Europe now represents only a sliver of what once was a major shipment destination for the technology. Even the former stronghold of Latin America is experiencing a decrease in the number of shipments of CRT TVs in the region, with digitization and economic growth spurring the uptake of flat-panels.
The majority of CRT TVs that are shipped now go into the Asia-Pacific region, primarily into India and Indonesia, at about 60 percent, with the next most significant region being the Middle East and Africaprimarily sub-Saharan Africaat 15 percent. However, even these regions will be phasing out of the CRT-TV business during the next three years.
PDP TVs have reached their peak
Last year was the peak for PDP televisions.
In 2012, two of the largest supporters of PDPPanasonic and LG Electronicsbegan scaling back plasma operations. LG reduced shipments in the first half of 2012, as did Panasonic; only Samsung actually increased shipments in 2012 . Plasma TVs do not lack for quality, but with large-sized LCD TVs rapidly reducing their pricing, plasma demand is beginning to decline, and with the exception of Samsung, manufacturers are transitioning away from plasma volumes.
OLED rising
While the inevitable decline for CRT and PDP TVs continues, OLED TVs will be the next big thing. While the early OLED TVs were launched in 2009 and 2010 by Sony and LG, these were small 11- and 15-inch televisions that were priced extremely high, limiting their appeal among consumers.
In the third quarter, both LG and Samsung are releasing 55-inch OLED TVs into the market. These televisions are initially expected to carry a very high average selling priceat around the $9,000 markbut the launch will only be the first of many for the market, as Panasonic and Sony also have plans to collaborate on an OLED television sometime in the future.
Revenue for OLED televisions will rise to $13.9 billion in 2016, up from a meager $500.0 million in 2013, on their way to $17.3 billion in 2017. Meanwhile, shipments are expected to rise to 18.3 million units by 2017, up from just 55,000 units this year.
A few month ago my 50” Samsung DLP TV developed tiny star-like spots on the screen. After calling the Samsung customer care center, I was impressed that they dispatched a tech to my home who replaced free of charge the DMD chip, a component smaller than a stick of Dentyne gum that projects the image onto the LED screen. I paid $1,200 for that TV on sale over five years ago but now that I see these sale prices on sets far superior to mine, I can see how Samsung can afford to provide such fine customer service.
Agreed. PQ is still better than LCD. We’ve got two Pannys and love them. The biggest problem is compressed video encoding in many sources...digital artifacts are visible, especially when streaming video rather than Blu Ray. Even some Blu Ray discs exhibit lots of artifacts.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.