Tag Archives: Apple

Latest News about Apple in China, financial news and Business analysis overview of the Chinese high Tech market expert based in China : Doug Young

SMARTPHONES: Apple Slows in China as Huawei Comes Nipping

Bottom line: Apple’s China sales are likely to enter a new period of slower growth as the Chinese domestic smartphone market stalls and a growing number of higher-end buyers flock to the surging Huawei.

Apple faces long-term China slowdown

Everyone is buzzing about Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) latest quarterly results, which show that sales of its iconic iPhones may have finally peaked and be set for a longer period of slow growth or even contraction. A key piece of that equation is the China market, where the company’s growth slowed sharply in the quarter due to fierce competition from a growing field of rising domestic competitors led by the surging Huawei.

As someone living in China, I can say with relative confidence that Huawei smartphones are indeed becoming increasingly common here on the streets of  Shanghai. The brand is still seen as distinctly Chinese, in contrast to the trendier but fast-fading Xiaomi that rose to prominence partly on its ability to escape the “made in China” image. Read Full Post…

News Digest: January 28, 2016

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 28. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Greater China Still Biggest Contributing Region as iPhone Sales Top Out (Chinese article)
  • China Cinda Said to Study Joining Yingli’s (NYSE: YGE) Debt Restructuring (English article)
  • Ericsson (NYSE: ERIC) Q4 Results Beat Expectations on China Rebound (Chinese article)
  • Qihoo (NYSE: QIHU) CEO Pledges 10 Pct Stake to Encourage Staff Entrepreneurship (English article)
  • TAL Education (NYSE: XRS) Announces Financial Results for Its Fiscal Q3 (PRNewswire)

SMARTPHONES: ZTE Joins Chorus of Smartphone Trouble Signals

Bottom line: Beijing should note the latest trouble signal from ZTE in the smartphone sector, and take steps to prevent future similar boom-bust cycles by encouraging more responsible investing incentives by local governments.

ZTE cautious on China smartphone market
ZTE cautious on China smartphone market

The latest trouble signal from China’s overheated smartphone sector came last week from telecoms stalwart ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063), which said it would remain cautious in the world’s largest market even as it announced ambitious new sales targets for the rest of the world this year. The company’s relative caution in its own home market comes amid a looming shakeout that is just the latest in a series of boom-bust cycles that have become all too common in China’s business landscape in the last 3 decades.

While market forces play a large role in these bubbles, regional governments looking to spur economic growth may also share some responsibility by offering incentives that encourage local firms to enter unfamiliar areas where the chance of failure is high. Such failures often result in big financial losses and mass layoffs, negating any economic benefit they were supposed to create. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Apple Tries Stores, E-Payments to Counter Slowing China

Bottom line: Apple’s accelerated China store openings and February roll-out of its Apple Pay service represent efforts to boost its local profile, as the broader China smartphone market shows signs of saturation and is likely to contract this year.

Apple Pay coming to China in February

Global smartphone leader Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) is kicking off the New Year by accelerating its efforts in China on two fronts, opening more of its trademark Apple Stores as it also prepares a February launch for a local version of its Apple Pay electronic payments service. Both campaigns have been in the headlines in recent days, extending a broader campaign by CEO Tim Cook to pay more attention to a market that could soon surpass the US to become Apple’s biggest.

At the same time, these latest campaigns come amid a growing chorus of predictions that sales of Apple’s iPhones could soon start to slow sharply. A primary factor behind that slowdown could be China, where the smartphone market has become saturated and is expected to contract in 2016 after 3 years of explosive growth. Read Full Post…

News Digest: January 23-25, 2016

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 23-25. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • ZTE (HKEx: 763) Eye) 70 Mln Smartphone Sales in 2016, Up 25 Pct, Cautious On China (Chinese article)
  • Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) to Open First China Shopping Center, Eyes Cross-Border E-Commerce (Chinese article)
  • Used Car Auction Website Uxin Raises $400 Mln Series D Funding – Source (English article)
  • Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) Workers Punished, 2 Fired for Related Party Transactions (Chinese article)
  • Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) Pay to Launch in China in February – Bank Document (Chinese article)

News Digest: January 21, 2016

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 21. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Weibo (Nasdaq: WB) Drops 140-Character Message Limit to Boost Usage (Chinese article)
  • Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) Accelerates China Expansion with 5 New Stores in January (Chinese article)
  • Ground-Breaking Held for First Six Flags (NYSE: SIX) Branded Theme Park in China (Businesswire)
  • Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Teams With Nvidia in $1 Bln Bet on Cloud Computing (English article)
  • ZTE (HKEx: 763), Suning Alliance Targets 10 Mln Nubia Smartphone Sales in 3 Years (Chinese article)

SMARTPHONES: Xiaomi Limps, LeTV Eyes Big Gains in Crowded Market

Bottom line: Competition will remain fierce in China’s smartphone market this year, as major players including Huawei and Xiaomi compete aggressively with newcomers like LeTV for market share.

LeTV sets ambitious smartphone goal

The sputtering Xiaomi and high-flying LeTV (Shenzhen: 300104) have become 2 of China’s first smartphone makers to announce 2015 sales figures, as broader industry data show just how crowded the field has become. Xiaomi’s first-look sales figures come in a microblog post from one of its executives, and show the company missed its 2015 sales target by around 10 percent. LeTV’s figures come from an emailed statement, and say the company sold a relatively modest 4 million smartphones last year following its entry to the space.

Then there’s the broader industry data that points out 7 of the world’s top 10 smartphone brands last year came from China. That report notes that among the top 10, only Samsung (Seoul: 005930), Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and LG (Seoul: 066570) were non-Chinese, and that a surging Huawei overtook Lenovo (HKEx: 992) to become the world’s leading Chinese brand. Read Full Post…

News Digest: January 12, 2016

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on January 12. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • China Media Capital Invests in ‘Star Wars’ Special Effects House Base FX (Chinese article)
  • Apple, Samsung supplier Biel Crystal plans $2 Bln HK IPO in 2016 – IFR (English article)
  • Uber Drives Into China Tourism Industry With HNA Group Tie-Up (English article)
  • Women’s Shopping Services Mogujie, Meilishuo Merge to Create $3 Bln Company (Chinese article)
  • ‘Star Wars: Force Awakens’ Breaks Records With $53 Mln China Debut (English article)

SMARTPHONES: Hungry Huawei Eyes US Smartphone Market

Bottom line: Huawei’s move into the US smartphone market looks like a logical and necessary step to consolidating its place as a top global brand, but will require years of major investment to succeed.

Huawei to sell smartphones in US
Huawei to sell smartphones in US

Riding high on strong momentum from the second half of 2015, smartphone maker Huawei is aiming to fill the last major black hole in its global footprint by entering the US. The new campaign carries special significance for Huawei, since the company was banned from selling its older networking equipment in the US several years back due to national security concerns from Washington.

The move into the US was just one of many topics that Huawei executives discussed at CES, the world’s biggest consumer electronics show taking place this week in Las Vegas. But it was the move the attracted the most attention due to Huawei’s past frustrations with one of the world’s biggest markets for both networking equipment and smartphones.  Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Huawei Passes 100 Mln Mark, Eyes Apple

Huawei sells 100 mln smartphones

It’s official: the fast-rising Huawei has formally passed the 100 million mark for smartphone sales this year, cementing its place as the world’s undisputed third largest player behind only Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Samsung (Seoul: 005930). In a relatively unusual move for this low-profile company, Huawei is also trumpeting the milestone in a formal press release and forecasting more strong growth for next year.

Huawei has been China’s biggest success story to date in the young smartphone space, gaining rapid momentum over a crowded field of domestic rivals that includes Lenovo (HKEx: 992), ZTE (HKEx: 763; Shenzhen: 000063) and smaller names like Alibaba-backed Meizu. But the company should also carefully watch the case of the stumbling Xiaomi, which was being called a homegrown Chinese version of Apple before it began its recent rapid fall from grace. Read Full Post…

E-COMMERCE: Piracy Dogs Apple’s New China HQ, Tops Alibaba Agenda

Bottom line: Apple should put out a short statement to answer online chatter that its new China headquarters looks like an older software park in Shandong, while Alibaba’s latest high-profile hire is its own move to tackle piracy on its sites.

Alibaba prioritizes piracy in 2016

A trio of piracy-related stories are in the headlines as we head into year-end, reflecting the recent focus that Beijing has put on an issue that is likely to get big attention in 2016. Leading the news are online observations by some web surfers that Apple’s (Nasdaq: AAPL) new China headquarters building bears a striking resemblance to a much older software park in northeastern Shandong province.

Next there’s the announcement of a major new anti-piracy hire by e-commerce juggernaut Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), which dodged a bullet last week by keeping its name off an annual US list naming the world’s most notorious markets for pirated goods. Alibaba’s new announcement has seen it name a former top Apple investigator to lead a renewed campaign to rid its online marketplaces of trafficking in pirated goods. Read Full Post…