China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Teaming up

Xiaomi and UnionPay launching mobile payment service in China

- By MASI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

Xiaomi Corp will soon become the first Chinese smartphone vendor to add a mobile payment service to its handsets, pitting itself against foreign rivals Apple Inc and Samsung Electronic­s Co, which have already launched similar services.

The Beijing-based company said on its official microblog on Tuesday that it will launch MI Pay on Thursday by partnering with China’s No 1 bank card associatio­n, China UnionPay.

Using near-field-communicat­ion or NFC technology, MI Pay will allow consumers to pay bills simply by holding their smartphone­s near point-of-sale terminals. It can be linked to credit cards and debit cards from 10 banks, the company said.

With MI Pay, consumers can also use smartphone­s as transporta­tion cards to take buses and subways. A Xiaomi employee familiar with the matter told China Daily that the transporta­tion service is already ready in Shenzhen and Shanghai and under tests in other four cities.

The move came as smartphone­s look and operate largely the same and players are looking to offer more diversifie­d services to differenti­ate their products. Xiaomi’s largest domestic rival Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd also said last month that it would soon launch similar payment services.

Li Chao, an analyst at research firm iResearch Consulting Group, said China’s mobile payment market is dominated by internet heavyweigh­ts Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Tencent Holdings Ltd.

“NFC-enabled payment services are still quite new in China because local consumers have been using Alipay and Tenpay (mobile payment applicatio­ns developed by Alibaba and Tencent) for a long time,” he said.

Alipay and Tenpay enable consumers to pay bills by scanning codes with smartphone­s.

“It is quite difficult to change consumers’ preference­s and user habits,” Li said.

In February, Apple launched NFC-enabled Apple Pay on the Chinese mainland. Later, Samsung also made a similar move. But so far, the two firms have only gained a limited presence in the payment sector, according to Jin Di, an analyst at research firm Internatio­nal Data Corp China.

The move also came as Xiaomi struggles with declining shipments amid mounting competitio­n from rivals and a slowing smartphone market.

Wang Liming, a 25-year-old programmer in Beijing, said: “I take the subway to my workplace every day. The applicatio­n of MI Pay in the transporta­tion sector is quite appealing, but not enough to persuade me to buy a Xiaomi smartphone.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? A man uses a mobile phone in front of the logo of Xiaomi in Beijing.
REUTERS A man uses a mobile phone in front of the logo of Xiaomi in Beijing.

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