Loading market data...
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Back to HomeNews

Samsung Defends Global TV Crown as China's TCL Narrows the Gap to 2.7 Points

By MinJeKim0 views
Share
Samsung Defends Global TV Crown as China's TCL Narrows the Gap to 2.7 Points

Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), Korea's largest company and the world's top television maker by shipments, held its No. 1 position in the global TV market in the first quarter of 2026 — but the lead is shrinking faster than at any point in the past year.

According to data from Counterpoint Research, a global technology market-research firm, Samsung's Q1 TV shipments rose 8% year-on-year, lifting its unit share from 16.1% a year earlier to 16.8%. The gain was not enough to keep China's TCL at bay. TCL's shipments jumped 22% over the same period and its share climbed from 12.0% to 14.1%, a 2.1-point increase, as reported by Chosunbiz citing Counterpoint. As a result, the gap between the two brands narrowed from 4.1 points in Q1 2025 to 2.7 points in Q1 2026 — a 1.4-point compression in a single year.

The arithmetic is the part that will catch a portfolio manager's eye. At the 1.4-point annual pace of the past year, the remaining 2.7-point gap would close in roughly two years if the trend held linearly — and the trend has, at least once, already crossed the line. Counterpoint Research's Global Monthly TV Tracker reported that TCL briefly surged past Samsung in global monthly shipments at the close of 2025, before Samsung reclaimed the quarterly lead in Q1 2026. The Q1 result is therefore better read as a recovery of the crown than an unthreatened defense of it.

What is driving the convergence

TCL's gain was broad-based rather than concentrated in one product, with QD-LCD and mini-LED LCD sets all expanding; mini-LED LCD TVs led the overall growth, per Counterpoint. Samsung, by contrast, posted strong year-on-year growth in its white-OLED (W-OLED) line, but OLED shipment volumes remain small relative to LCD, so the OLED momentum was not enough to shift the headline trajectory.

There is also a demand-quality caveat the headline share figures obscure. According to TrendForce, global Q1 2026 TV shipments reached 47.12 million units — the highest first-quarter total since 2020 — but that surge was largely a supply-chain effect: tight DRAM and NAND Flash supply, diverted toward AI server builds, drove a memory-price spike that pushed brands to pull in and stockpile orders before costs rose further, artificially inflating Q1 volumes. TrendForce projects full-year 2026 shipments to fall about 1% year-on-year and warns that brands may lose the room to run the deep second-half promotions that historically sustain demand. In other words, part of the Q1 strength across the board — Samsung and TCL alike — may have been borrowed from later quarters.

The structural shift underneath the numbers

The more consequential story may be industry consolidation. Sony and TCL signed a memorandum of understanding on January 20, 2026, to form a joint venture — TCL holding 51% and Sony 49% — that will take over Sony's global home-entertainment business spanning product development, manufacturing, sales and service, with operations targeted to begin in April 2027, per Sony's disclosure. A parallel possibility involving Korea's LG Electronics, the world's No. 4 TV brand, has surfaced. Counterpoint analyst Lee Jae-ho said that if Hisense were to tap LG Electronics' OLED expertise, fourth-place share and premium distribution network, it "could naturally acquire the global number-one shipment position."

The open question is whether that LG-Hisense tie-up moves from speculation to signed agreement, as the Sony-TCL deal already has. The next confirm-or-refute data point is the Q2 and second-half 2026 shipment readings: if TCL keeps compounding double-digit growth while memory-driven pull-in demand fades for everyone, the 2.7-point gap is the number to watch.


This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. All figures are attributed to the sources cited and were verified as of publication.

Sources

NewsFinanceMarkets

Go deeper than the headline

You just read what happened. Here's how to read what it means.

This company

Full report on Samsung Electronics

We read Samsung Electronics's latest DART filing in full — financials under K-IFRS, governance, and what it means for the stock. PDF in your inbox in 30–40 min.

$12 · one-time

Get the Samsung Electronics report
Every name you watch

Follow the whole market

Reading several Korean stocks a week? Get on-demand analysis on any KOSPI or KOSDAQ company, whenever you need it.

$9.99 · monthly

Subscribe

Independent journalism based on primary DART filings — not investment advice. No brokerage affiliation.