Tag Archives: Huawei

China’s Huawei, one of the world’s largest smartphone providers
Latest news about Huawei Technologies Co, Chinese IT and telecommunications company

China News Digest: August 5, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on August 5. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Massive Funding, Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) Backing Helped Didi Outrun Uber in China (English article)
  • China Starts to Lose Its Taste for McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD) and KFC (NYSE: YUM) (English article)
  • Tablet PC Sales Fall in Q2, But Lenovo (HKEx: 992), Huawei Post Gains (Chinese article)
  • Bitauto (NYSE: BITA) Consortium Invests $550 Mln in Yixin Capital (PRNewswire)
  • Online Children’s English Learning Platform Vipkid Wins $100 Mln Series C Funding (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

TELECOMS: Qualcomm Regains China Footing with Oppo Deal

Bottom line: Qualcomm’s new licensing deal with Oppo extends a recent upbeat trend for the company in China after a yearlong retrenchment, and will be followed by more similar deals through the rest of this year.

Qualcomm in licensing deal with Oppo

Following a difficult year in China that saw it fined a record amount for anti-competitive behavior, global telecoms chip leader Qualcomm (Nasdaq: QCOM) appears to be slowing regaining its footing in the world’s largest smartphone market. That’s my interpretation of the latest headline, which has the company announcing a new chip licensing deal with Oppo, one of the market’s fastest growing smartphone makers. Word of this latest deal almost certainly came from Qualcomm itself, which is eager to show its days of trouble in China are in the past. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Apple’s Tumble from China Tree Accelerates

Bottom line: Apple could be on the cusp of a prolonged China downturn unless it can roll out smartphones with new breakthrough technology, as it gets overwhelmed by similar Chinese models that sell for far lower prices.

Apple China sales tumble 33 pct in Q2

The latest financial report from Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) shows the company continues to struggle as sales of its core iPhones pass their prime, and nowhere is that story more apparent than in China. The company’s Greater China sales, which also includes Hong Kong and Taiwan, fell 33 percent in its latest reporting quarter, accelerating from an already sharp drop of 26 percent in the first 3 months of this year.

The rapid decline dropped China to Apple’s third largest market globally from its former spot as the company’s second largest, with Europe taking over the number two position. Apple’s story is hardly unique, as the world’s other global leader Samsung (Seoul: 005930) has also seen a sharp reversal over the last year after its own recent rise to take the global smartphone crown. Read Full Post…

PCs: Xiaomi Aims Low with Notebook PC Entry

Bottom line: Xiaomi’s new move into notebook PCs looks like a necessary step toward its goal of creating an ecosystem of entertainment products and services, but is likely to suffer from weak reviews and stiff competition from established brands.

Xiaomi rolls out notebook PCs

I really want to write something positive about fading smartphone maker Xiaomi these days, but the company really isn’t giving us much suitable material with its steady string of new but uninspired products. The latest of those is a couple of new notebook PC models, marking its move into a crowded area where it will face stiff competition from established players like Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Lenovo (HKEx: 992), as well as new entrant Huawei.

One could argue that while Xiaomi is coming late to the notebook PC game, such a move is still necessary since such computers will be a critical component to the company’s dream of building an ecosystem of products and services around a range of interfaces like PCs, smartphones and TVs. And Xiaomi is still ahead of the more upward trending LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104), which likes the ecosystem idea so much that it actually changed its former name from LeTV to include this recent industry buzzword. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Huawei Margins, Sales Show Smartphone Stress

Bottom line: Huawei’s eroding profit margins and slowing smartphone sales growth reflect stresses being felt both at home and abroad in an overheated industry showing rapid signs of global saturation.

Huawei announces H1 results

The latest financial results from Huawei are showing how smartphones are at once becoming a growth engine but also a drag on the telecoms giant. The company’s fast-growing smartphone business was one of the main engines behind a 40 percent surge in sales during the first half of this year, as Huawei consolidated its position as the world’s third largest brand behind only Samsung (Seoul: 005930) and Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL). But at the same time, fierce competition in the sector also sharply eroded Huawei’s profit margins. Read Full Post…

INTERNET: Fortune 500 Misses China Web Giants, Captures JD Minnow

Bottom line: The appearance of JD.com as China’s first Internet company in the Fortune 500 and exclusion of the nation’s 3 biggest players underscores major shortcomings of the list due to its reliance on revenue as the basis for its rankings.

JD.com lands in Fortune 500

Everyone is buzzing these last few days about the latest edition of the Fortune 500, including the rising presence of China on the list of the world’s largest companies by revenue. But as a China tech watcher, the fact that most caught my attention was the absence of China’s top 3 Internet companies from the list, namely Tencent (HKEx: 700), Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU). Adding to the puzzle was the appearance of Alibaba’s much smaller e-commerce rival JD.com (Nasdaq: JD), which became the first Chinese Internet company to make the Fortune 500 list. Read Full Post…

China News Digest: July 27, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on July 27. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • LeEco (Shenzhen: 300104) to Buy US TV Maker Vizio for $2 Bln (English article)
  • South China Morning Post CEO Resigns, Takes Position at Temasek (Chinese article)
  • Huawei Says Sold 60.56 Mln Smartphones in H1, Consolidates World No. 3 Position (Chinese article)
  • Gome (HKEx: 493) in Online Alliance with China Resources’ Feiniu.com (Chinese article)
  • China’s 4G Subscriber Base Surpasses 600 Mln in June – MIIT (English article)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

China News Digest: July 26, 2016

The following press releases and news reports about China companies were carried on July 26. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) Says Group Withdraws Offer to Acquire iQiyi (PRNewswire)
  • Wanda’s AMC (NYSE: AMC) Raises Bid for Carmike (Nasdaq: CKEC) to $1.2 Bln (Chinese article)
  • Chinese Dealmaker Sonny Wu Said to Lead Takeover of AC Milan (English article)
  • Huawei H1 Revenue Rises 40 Pct, Profit Margin Falls to 12 Pct (Chinese article)
  • Geely (HKEx: 175) Sells 2 EV Joint Ventures to Parent for 1.35 Bln Yuan (HKEx announcement)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

SMARTPHONES: Huawei Snagged in Global Smartphone Slowdown

Bottom line: New data shows Huawei’s smartphone sales growth slowed sharply in the second quarter, and the company will be lucky to log 20 percent annual growth due to saturation in its home China market.

Huawei smartphone growth slows sharply in Q2

The first of many reports for second-quarter smartphone sales has just come out, revealing one of the first declines in more than a year for the surging Huawei. At the same time, the new data from TrendForce show that surging Chinese brands Oppo and Vivo are also seeing rapid slowdowns in their recent breakneck growth. The bigger picture is that the global smartphone market is slowing sharply or even contracting after years of rapid growth, with global leaders Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Samsung (Seoul: 005930) also suffering big drops this year. Read Full Post…

SMARTPHONES: Xiaomi Taps Star Power in Drive to Go Upscale

Bottom line: Xiaomi’s new campaign that includes the hiring of 3 celebrity spokespeople and an aim of moving upscale looks like a move of desperation and is unlikely to produce strong results due to difficulty of making such a transition.

Xiaomi tries star power to revive fortunes

Struggling smartphone maker Xiaomi is having a bit of an identity crisis these days, as it tries to reposition itself in a bid to jump start its growth by becoming more mainstream. At the same time, the company also wants a more upscale image as part of its new look, in a nod to the intense competition that has thrust many makers of lower-end models into the red. To make the transition, the company is embarking on a major new campaign that includes the hiring of 3 big celebrities to promote the new image. Read Full Post…

TELECOMS: Inspur Wins Big New Partner with Ericsson Tie-Up

Bottom line: Ericsson’s new tie-up with Inspur looks like a savvy move to gain a foothold in the nation’s fast-growing market to supply infrastructure to power Internet-related products and services.

Ericsson ties up with Inspur

Chinese IT services firm Inspur has just scored a major new partnership, with word that it’s forming a new tie-up to offer cloud and other Internet-based services with global telecoms equipment leader Ericsson. (Stockholm: ERICb). The new tie-up adds to a growing stable of similar alliances between Inspur and big-name foreign partners, following previous tie-ups with IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Cisco (Nasdaq: CSCO).

We should begin by pointing out that this kind of tie-up isn’t that uncommon for big foreign high-tech names, since Beijing often prefers that such companies form joint ventures for doing business in the vast Chinese market. That drive for tie-ups has accelerated over the last year, following Beijing’s roll-out of a new national security law that requires foreign high-tech product makers to work with Chinese partners when selling to the government or big state-owned companies. Read Full Post…