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Hoya sells Pentax camera business to Ricoh

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Ricoh and Hoya announced today (PDF) that Ricoh is acquiring the Pentax digital camera business from Hoya in a bid to expand into the consumer digital camera market. Although Ricoh was a early player in the digial camera market and continues to make high-end compact cameras, the company hasn’t been a real player in the consumer space. By acquiring Pentax—including medium format K-mount and Q-mount DLSR as well as the Optio point-and-shoot line and security products—Ricoh hopes to get a firmer grip on the consumer market.

The companies did not reveal the purchase price, but the Nikkei Business Daily reports Ricoh is paying ¥10 billion, or about US$125 million. To handle the deal, Hoya will version spin off the Pentax business to a newly-created third company—not-so-creatively name NewCo—which will then be transferred to Ricoh once the deal concludes. Hoya has to spin out the Pentax business because it merged with Pentax in a $770 million deal back in 2008. The companies expect the deal with conclude in October.

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Hoya, known for its lenses, isn’t getting out of the optics business entirely: it will still make digital camera modules, lenses for optical media systems, endoscopes, and other products (which, oddly enough, includes synthetic bones). Endoscopes and other non-consumer products will still carry the Pentax name.

Although smartphones are increasingly becoming many consumers’ go-to cameras for casual photography, there’s still a significant market for high-quality interchangeable-lens cameras amongst professional and so-called “pro-sumer” photographers. Ricoh also expects Pentax’s security imaging business to “significantly contribute” to the company’s growth.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
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