Reports that Sony is considering buying Ericsson out of the pair’s handset joint venture make sense.
The world has changed a lot in the decade since Sony Ericsson was formed, with the shift in focus from hardware to content ‘ecosystems’ making Ericsson’s contribution to the business far less valuable than Sony’s huge stack of music, film and gaming titles.
Sony is likely considering all options that will allow it to better leverage that content against Apple, Google and even Amazon. Taking control of the handset business would arguably allow it to develop a more coherent content strategy incorporating its TV sets, PlayStation games consoles, and mobile phones.
In addition, Ericsson isn’t likely to hold its current partner to ransom over its patents should a buyout happen. If nothing else, licensing to Sony would add to its current patent income.
Whatever course of action is decided on, it’s clear that something has to give at Sony Ericsson. In addition to that 2Q loss, the firm has slipped down the global handset sales charts as rivals including Apple, ZTE and HTC have ramped sales. The joint venture ranked in tenth place during the quarter, Gartner figures show, a far cry from the top three position held when the venture was formed.