Bottom line: Huawei’s smartphone prices should continue to rise this year as it rolls out more higher-end models, while Xiaomi’s new drone product looks like a publicity ploy to draw attention back to its sputtering smartphones.
Just days after new data showed Huawei finishing 2015 as China’s smartphone leader, different new data is revealing the company was the market’s only domestic brand that was able to raise prices for its products during the year. That boosts the growing perception that Huawei is emerging as China’s first solid mid-range smartphone brand, as it tries to climb the value ladder to someday challenge global leader Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL).
Meantime, domestic rival Xiaomi, which once also liked to compare itself to Apple, is diverging from its former US role model by preparing to roll out a drone product, according to media reports. If the reports are true, this would look like a somewhat desperate move by the fast-fading Xiaomi, which is unable to generate much positive buzz these days for news related to its struggling smartphone division. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 19. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Major Banks in Rush to Support Apple Pay (Nasdaq: AAPL) After China Launch (Chinese article)
Uber Losing $1 Bln a Year to Compete in China (English article)
Xiaomi to Release Consumer Drone – Reports (English article)
Average Huawei Smartphone Price in China Rose in 2015 to $213, As Others Fall (Chinese article)
Bottom line: Huawei is likely to consolidate its position as China’s top smartphone brand this year, while Lenovo and Samsung could regain some market share as each mounts aggressive turnaround campaigns.
A year is almost like an eternity in the fast-moving smartphone world, and nowhere is that reality more on display than in the latest quarterly data on China’s cut-throat market. In the smartphone history books, 2015 will go down as the year that saw Huawei surge to become China’s largest player, with smaller homegrown brands Vivo and Oppo also making impressive gains. On the other side of the aisle, the year is one that former high-flyers Samsung(Seoul: 005930) and especially Lenovo (HKEx: 992) would rather forget, as both plunged out of the nation’s top 5 brands.
Smartphones are an extremely big business due to their high prices, a fact that has drawn numerous companies to the space and created intense competition in China. But constant changes to technology, combined with increasing commoditization due to the dominance of the free Android operating system, means that unknown companies can quickly rise to become major players. Similarly, a winner one year can quickly stumble to become a loser the next. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: A new equity alliance between Qihoo and Norway’s Opera web browser is a smart move that could see initial turbulence due to differing management styles, but should ultimately benefit both sides.
Security software specialist Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) is taking an important step towards its ambitions of becoming a global Internet brand, with word that it’s part of a group set to buy Norway-based Opera (Oslo: OPERA), maker of the world’s fourth most popular mobile Internet browser. Qihoo is already the maker of one of China’s most popular homegrown web browsers, and is also posing one of the first serious challenges in years to online search leader Baidu(Nasdaq: BIDU) with its Haosou.com engine. It’s also making a big push to move its highly popular security software products into the global marketplace.
Against that backdrop, this new deal looks quite intriguing and also like a smart step for Qihoo to complement its current strengths. But I would also caution that Qihoo is famous for its business tactics, which many might describe as highly aggressive and even unethical. Those include designing products that make big changes to computer and smartphone configurations without their users’ knowledge, most often to favor Qihoo at the expense of rival products. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Xiaomi and Meizu are trying to expand their exports by working through third-party distributors, and could make a formal entry into the US later this year after studying the market for patent-related liability.
After dancing around the edges of the lucrative but extremely competitive US market for much of the last 2 years, fast-fading Chinese superstar Xiaomi and up-and-coming local rival Meizu may finally be preparing to enter the market through tie-ups with local carriers. A flurry of new media reports say the pair of Chinese brands are already making the move via a tie-up that will see their smartphones offered by US Mobile, a virtual network operator (VNO) that uses T-Mobile’s (Nasdaq: TMUS) network.
But no sooner did the reports emerge that Xiaomi issued its own statement saying it had no plans to sell its phones in the US, and that US Mobile was not one of its authorized distributors. Meizu also said it has no announced plans to enter the US. What seems clear from all this is that both companies are probably talking with one or more distributors about selling their smartphones in the US and possibly other western markets, even though neither is quite ready to make a formal announcement. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on February 3. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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Yingli (NYSE: YGE) Gets 2 Bln Yuan Bank Loan Infusion, Prepares to Reorganize (Chinese article)
Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) Leads $800 Mln Funding for Augmented Reality Firm Magic Leap (Chinese article)
China Lodging Group (Nasdaq: HTHT) to Form China Time Share JV with Weshare (Chinese article)
China Media Capital Invests 100 Mln Yuan in Financial New Media Huaerjie Jianwen (Chinese article)
T-Mobile Supplier to Import Xiaomi, Meizu Smartphones (Chinese article)
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.
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…
Bottom line: A subdued mood at Chinese high-tech firms’ New Years parties reflects a growing realism that the days of breakneck growth may be over for many, due to stiff competition and a slowing domestic economy.
The Year of the Monkey is still more than a week away, but already online gaming giant NetEase (NYSE: NTES) is taking the prize for most unusual New Year’s party for including sex toys among its cache of prizes during the lottery at its annual bash. Meantime, stumbling smartphone sensation Xiaomi ushered in the New Year with an unusual dose of new realism from chief Lei Jun, who also added a bit of historical revisionism in a bid to cheer up staff at his annual party.
Theses yearly parties are a good indicator of how companies feel about their performance in the previous year, and also offer some insight into their mood going into the year ahead. A media report sums up highlights from some of this year’s biggest parties, which typically bring together hundreds and sometimes thousands of employees at a single event to celebrate the New Year as a corporate “family”. Read Full Post…
What a difference a year makes. It was almost exactly this time last year that smartphone sensation Xiaomi was king of the world, after closing a major new funding round that valued the company at a lofty $45 billion just 5 years after its founding. That was the last time Xiaomi boasted of its high valuation, and since then the company’s name has become more associated with marketing snafus, product delays and minor scandals involving issues like false advertising.
So it seems appropriate that Xiaomi is kicking off the new year with yet another new scandal, this one involving its air purifiers that were at the center of yet another scandal when they first launched about a year ago. This time the bad news is coming from Shanghai’s quality regulator, which says Xiaomi’s air purifiers fail to meet its standards. Read Full Post…
Bottom line: Huawei’s new move into notebook PCs could seriously challenge the existing establishment, and it could become a top 5 brand by the end of next year.
Telecoms giant Huawei is making a surprise move into the PC market, with word that it will launch a new line of notebook models next month using chips supplied by Intel (Nasdaq: INTC). The move would put Huawei into direct competition with leading PC maker Lenovo (HKEx: 992), as it aggressively expands beyond its older networking equipment business and diversifies into consumer electronics.
Huawei’s move into notebooks isn’t a huge surprise, since such products are increasingly similar to the new generation of smartphones where Huawei has found recent success. Huawei already sells tablet PCs, which perform many of the functions as notebooks as well. But the move does represent an entire new product area for Huawei, and is almost certain to put the company on collision course with Lenovo in their home China market. Read Full Post…
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.
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…