Currently Walton does not have the brand power to sell under it's own name.
It is selling to OEMs, who are selling under their own names, but this could change in the future if it can build up it's own brand power.
This relies a lot on BD itself being seen as a modern hi-tech country like what Korea and Taiwan managed last century.
PS - Walton exports mobile phones to USA. Some of the mid-range smartphones sold in USA right now are Walton designed and manufactured phones.
@UKBengali bhai, they might be limited to being an OEM manufacturer for a while. Even Chinese manufacturers today and Japanese manufacturers fifty years ago were OEM makers.
In apparel, as well as electronics, it takes years and years to establish a trustable brand-name which is a household name.
Manufacturing is an entirely different skillset than marketing in specific markets, which needs investments in establishing marketing channels and wholesaler/dealer agreements. It is expensive and often an uphill battle.
For example in the 1950's the hottest name in TV's in US was Quasar, Zenith, Amana, Fisher, Admiral etc. before the Japanese brands got in. These brandnames were all made in USA and sold in specialty electronics stores, Walmart or BestBuy etc. did not exist back then. But they eventually died because made in Japan (later Taiwan) electronics were simple a lot cheaper, and often the same quality (or better).
In the UK I think you had Pye, English electric etc. which also died by the 1980's like the US brands above. For a time - Sanyo (who bought the Pye brand) was selling Pye branded TV's in the UK made in Singapore in the 1970s.
Akai, (as well as Sansui) which were Hi Fidelity Japanese audio brands back in the 70's, is now owned by a HK Conglomerate and uses the brand now to sell cheap TV's at Walmart. Walton could do the same.
Some of these brands were later revived by the OEM manufacturers in China, they did not want to offer a Chinese brand which was unproven. If TV's sell, then that's more than sufficient.
The analog TV broadcast systems were different too (NTSC in the US, PAL for UK and Bangladesh/Pakistan). For digital broadcasts Pakistan chose a different system than India. TVs sold in each country need to be tuned to digital broadcast systems for that country and offered menus and features for their taste. When Walton sold TV sets for Germany they did that.
Panasonic bought out Quasar TV Brand from Motorola in 1974 in the US after manufacturing TV's for them for at least two decades.
en.wikipedia.org
Now their value-price sets for lower rung market are made in China by Matsushita (Panasonic) owned factories. These are also sold at Walmart (43 inch sets for about $300).
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Quasar-Q43UST1M-43-Inch-Class-4K-UHD-Smart-LED-TV/316077105?wmlspartner=wlpa&selectedSellerId=0&adid=22222222222000000000&wmlspartner=wmtlabs&wl0=e&wl1=s&wl2=c&wl3=10352200394&wl4=pla-1103028060075&wl12=316077105_0&wl14=Quasar TV&veh=sem&msclkid=dbbc255e009b10607021455d62867cdb
Walton, similarly, needs to increase export volume by selling OEM TVs under large brands like Walmart and Target (US) until they can buy one of the dying brand-names in the US and revive it.