TOKYO--Sharp Corp. (6753.TO) is in discussions with U.S. technology companies to bolster its battered balance sheet and has offered a stake to Dell Inc. (DELL), among others, in return for a stable supply of breakthrough display technology, according to people familiar with the discussions.

The Japanese electronics manufacturer has turned to U.S. business partners as its negotiations with Taiwanese contract manufacturing giant Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. (2317.TW) for an equity stake continue to drag on with little indication that a deal will be completed deal before a March deadline.

Other than Dell, Sharp is also talking to Intel Corp. (INTC) and Qualcomm Inc. (QCOM) about a capital injection, the people said. Sharp is eyeing an investment of as much as Y20 billion, or $240 million, from both Dell and Intel, while discussing a smaller investment from Qualcomm, the people said. The investment may come in the form of equity or debt, one of the people said.

Local media have reported Sharp's discussions with Intel and Qualcomm, but the capital alliance talks with Dell haven't been reported before. The talks are ongoing and may not result in a deal or the terms may change, the people said.

Officials at Dell, Intel and Qualcomm declined to comment on the report. Sharp spokeswoman Miyuki Nakayama said the company can't comment on "whether we are in talks with any companies."

Sharp's financial condition is fragile. The company is forecasting a second straight year of record losses and it is burning through cash. Its credit rating has been downgraded to below investment grade, or junk status, and there are questions about whether it can survive without additional capital. It has sold off assets such as overseas TV assembly factories to raise money.

The sale of assets and technology is a prevailing theme across Japan's embattled electronics sector. In addition to Sharp, Panasonic Corp. and Sony Corp. are aggressively pursuing deals to raise money and streamline operations to focus on core businesses. While most of the deals, thus far, involve the sale of factories or capital-intensive businesses, the next wave of deals may include once-coveted technologies to Asian rivals.

The situation may be more serious at Sharp, which warned earlier this month that it is facing conditions that may raise uncertainties about its future as a going concern. In a subsequent statement, Sharp said it had taken countermeasures to resolve such conditions.

Sharp is banking on strong demand of a new liquid crystal display technology called IGZO to help fuel its turnaround. IGZO derives its names from a new material--indium gallium zinc oxide--used to manufacture the display. Sharp has said the IGZO displays hold several advantages over today's amorphous silicon-based screens.

According to Sharp, the displays don't consume as much power, extending the battery life of mobile devices. Sharp said the new displays also increase the number of pixels per inch to allow for sharper resolution, while it enables touchscreens to be more accurate and sensitive.

While the technology holds great promise to solve many of the limitations of today's smartphones, tablet computers, and laptops, the displays are not easy to manufacture. Sharp has struggled with low production yields for the IGZO displays, limiting the availability and increasing the manufacturing costs of the screens. So far, Sharp is the only company manufacturing displays using IGZO.

Sharp President Takashi Okuda has said it is counting on IGZO to save the company. In negotiations for capital alliances, Sharp executives are promoting the displays as a potentially game-changing technology, one of the people familiar with the talks said.

Last week, a senior Sharp executive said it is open to concessions in its negotiations with Hon Hai, admitting that it's unrealistic to think the Japanese firm can reclaim the original deal agreed upon in March for Hon Hai to take a 9.9% stake at Y550 per share for a total investment of Y66.9 billion.

Hon Hai retreated from the agreement in August as Sharp's shares sank after the Japanese company posted declining results amid a slowdown in demand for its liquid-crystal-display television sets and the panels used to make the TVs. At the time, a Taiwanese regulator balked at the potential investment by Hon Hai, saying the expected return of a capital injection in Sharp wasn't reasonable enough.

The two sides are continuing to talk, but the Sharp executive, who the company asked not to be identified, said the unpredictability of its earnings are hindering the talks with Hon Hai.

-Ian Sherr and Don Clark in San Francisco contributed to this article.

Write to Atsuko Fukase at atsuko.fukase@dowjones.com and Daisuke Wakabayashi at daisuke.wakabayashi@wsj.com.

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