The Phnom Penh Post

Rise of the $1,000 smartphone

Insurance sector sees healthy expansion

- Hor Kimsay Hayley Tsukayama

CAMBODIA’S insurance industry continued to experience strong growth during the first half of this year, with the total gross premium reaching $68 million, an increase of 21 percent compared with the same period in 2016, according to a report released yesterday by the Insurance Associatio­n of Cambodia (IAC).

While the report did not break down premium growth by insurance type, IAC Chairman Huy Vatharo said life insurance accounted for the biggest upswing in terms of percentage, while general insurance, including fire, health and vehicle coverage, saw modest gains.

“I’m very excited to see the prosperity of the insurance sector in Cambodia alongside the country’s economic rise,” he said. “This reflects higher understand­ing of the population and business institutio­ns towards the concept of insurance.”

Cambodia’s insurance industry consists of seven general insurers and six life insurers. Life insurance, which only entered the market five years ago, has experience­d substantia­l growth with over $1 billion worth of coverage issued in the first half of this year, according to the report.

Robert Elliott, vice chairman of the IAC, said in the report that the past five years have shown an extraordin­ary growth in life insurance premiums that were underpinne­d by efforts from the Ministry of Economy and Finance (MEF) to educate customers about the need for longterm financial planning.

“As a result of that more Cambodians trust [the] life insurance business and allow us to protect their family,” he said, adding that continued support and further collaborat­ion with the MEF would allow the sector to build a stronger financial future for the country.

AS WE gear up for another smartphone battle between Samsung and Apple this fall, there is a new wrinkle for the average smartphone customer to consider: prices that edge toward $1,000 for a new phone.

The Note 8, Samsung’s latest premium smartphone, starts at $940. For months, analysts have speculated that the 10th anniversar­y edition of the iPhone, which will debut at Apple’s rumoured September 12 event, could be even higher. Even for smartphone customers used to paying $800 or $900 for a phone, the $1,000 mark may seem a bridge too far. For that, after all, you could easily get a pretty good laptop – a MacBook or Surface Laptop, for instance.

What’s behind the price increases? Some of it is pure function, as these phones do more than even the standard iPhone or Galaxy models. In general, smartphone­s carry more technology than ever before. While they aren’t yet laptop replacemen­ts, smartphone­s are required to do more than ever before as people rely on them for way more than web browsing or phone calls. (Remember those?) Making something versatile, portable and with enough battery life to endure being used every moment of the day isn’t cheap.

The smartphone-buying public is also craving innovation from this latest batch of phones. And innovation is expensive. The Note 8’s 6.3inch edge-to-edge screen is its main feature, and a costly one. The same is true of Apple’s expected super-sharp OLED screen in the iPhone; the phone could also have new facial recognitio­n technology and wireless charging, which all contribute­s to its bigger price jump.

Another part of it, of course, is profit. Apple and Samsung are companies, after all, and ones that are very good at making money – in fact, they’re basically the only ones in the smartphone business who make any on their phones.

Both companies declined to comment.

It’s hard to say whether anything will really justify a smartphone price that large in the average consumer’s minds. But the point for Samsung and Apple is that they may not have to.

For one, both are looking at markets where people have been waiting to upgrade for a while. Given the Note 7 debacle and Apple’s decision not to substantia­lly upgrade the iPhone 7, there are plenty of people with extra cash champ- ing at the bit to get their hands on something brand-new and spectacula­r.

Secondly, in the case of both the Note 8 and the rumoured upcoming $1,000 iPhone, these are top-of-theline phones for the companies, both a cut above the “everyone” phones: think Lexus, not Toyota.

Still, knowing why a smartphone edges up the price scale doesn’t exactly help one with realities of paying for one.

The good news – or at least, the less-bad news – is that very few people are going to pay so much for a phone all at once, analysts said. For the Note 8, there are already many discounts in place to soften the blow or sweeten the deal.

A $1,000 price point is “unlikely” to hurt most users in the US, said Ramon Llamas, analyst at Internatio­nal Data Corp. “Aggressive prices by leading carriers” make even $1,000 phones easier to swallow, he said – the highest-end iPhone 7 Plus is already $969, but can be purchased for $46 a month.

For most people, it will be most palatable to buy a phone on one of these subsidised plans – the old-fashioned kind where you pay your wireless carrier a portion of the phone’s price up front, and then a little bit every month.

The people who will really get hit are those who want to buy the phone outright, whether as a cost-saving measure or to make it easier to jump carriers. In the US, that’s about 12.5 percent of Americans, according to a June survey from analysis firm NPD. Overseas, where Apple and Samsung are both trying to grow, it’s far more common.

Consumers shouldn’t expect prices to drop in any big way in the smartphone generation­s to come, Llamas said. Neither Apple nor Samsung has a history of lowering prices on their new phones, though they will move older ones down the price scale.

In the end, what consumers will see happen is that both Samsung and Apple are trying to carve out a new tier of the market above where we’ve traditiona­lly thought of them, where they still stand a chance of making money and won’t tarnish their brands with cheaper phones.

 ?? DON EMMERT/AFP ?? Members of the media get a look at the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 at the unveiling event last week in New York.
DON EMMERT/AFP Members of the media get a look at the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 at the unveiling event last week in New York.
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