SONY JUST HANDED ITS CROWN JEWELS TO CHINA
In a shocking surrender, Sony is handing control of its legendary Bravia TV business to Chinese rival TCL. The PlayStation giant is selling a 51% controlling stake, effectively giving China the keys to one of Japan’s most iconic home entertainment brands.
Starting in 2027, TVs with the Sony and Bravia names will be built using TCL’s technology. This isn’t a partnership—it’s a takeover. Sony is retreating from a brutal, low-margin market, but China’s TCL is advancing. They just replaced Samsung in a prime CES showcase, and now they’re bagging a premium Japanese brand to supercharge their global conquest.
Why does this matter? This is about MORE than just TVs. It’s a pattern. Japan Inc. is ceding ground while China systematically acquires the prestige and technical know-how it once lacked. TCL didn’t become a budget TV giant in the U.S. by accident. They’ve already slapped their name on BlackBerry and Alcatel phones. Now, they’re coming for the top shelf.
Who stays silent? The tech giants cheering for cheaper supply chains. The investors only looking at the next quarterly report. Meanwhile, a piece of our technological heritage is being quietly absorbed into China’s manufacturing empire.
The message is clear: when the competition gets too tough, even giants can be bought.




