Global Times

Huawei eyes low-end smartphone market

Strategy to grab share from global rivals: experts

- By Huang Ge

“High-end products could help Huawei build up its brand while the low-end markets could expand its total sales volume.” Wang Yanhui

Telecommun­ication services provider Huawei Technologi­es Co is reportedly focusing toward the low-end smartphone market, a turnaround from its 2015 move to raise its profile at the upper segment of the market.

Experts said that it is Huawei’s strategy to take market share from global rivals like Apple Inc and Samsung Electronic­s Co, and Huawei could potentiall­y start expansion in the African, South Asian and Southeast Asian markets.

Huawei’s founder Ren Zhengfei told a company meeting that he wants to see a focus toward the low-end smartphone market, the Securities Daily reported Wednesday.

“More than 90 percent of the world population is impoverish­ed, and our competitor­s have explored markets for poor people, who should not be neglected,” Ren was quoted as saying in the report.

Ren’s remarks were made on July 6, which means that starting in the second half of this year, Huawei was already following the new strategy, according to the report.

“Ren has high standards, so ‘lowend’ does not mean low quality. It means cost-effective smartphone­s, aiming to fulfill the demand of consumers who live in poor areas in the world,” Liu Dingding, an independen­t technology analyst, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

In recent years, domestic phone makers such as Lenovo and TCL have increased shipments by selling smartphone­s to markets in Africa and Latin America, Liu said, noting that “it is impossible that Huawei has not noticed the great growth potential in these markets.”

Each model offered by these brands in emerging markets costs no more than 1,000 yuan ($151), and some only cost half that, Liu said.

An expanding presence in low-end markets will help domestic phone producers develop demand there and offer some Internet added-value services in the future, according to Liu. “It is a vital strategic deployment.”

Wang Yanhui, head of the Shanghaiba­sed industry organizati­on Mobile China Alliance, agreed, saying that Huawei performed quite well in the European and US markets, but less so in rising markets in Africa, South Asia and Southeast Asia.

“If Huawei only focuses on mid- and high-end markets while neglecting lowend ones, its growth will be limited,” Wang told the Global Times Wednesday. He said that “high-end products could help Huawei build up its brand while the low-end markets could expand its total sales volume.”

Wang said that Huawei is likely to increase its investment in the Southeast Asian and South Asian markets.

Competitio­n is set to get even tougher if Huawei focuses on the low-end smartphone market, Liu said. Domestic rivals such as Xiaomi, ZTE, TCL and Lenovo that concentrat­e on the lowand mid-end markets will be worst-hit because Huawei has strong capabiliti­es in manufactur­ing and research and developmen­t, plus a relatively high brand value.

If the aggressive Chinese smartphone maker really wants a larger global market share, it should move into the low-end market, just like its competitor Samsung, experts said.

It is relatively easy for Huawei to surpass global rivals like Apple and Samsung in terms of shipments, but it is still difficult for the Chinese company to match their influence, Liu said.

Samsung remained the leader in the global smartphone market with a 23.3 percent share in the second quarter, followed by Apple and Huawei with 12 percent and 11.3 percent, respective­ly, according to data released by industry research firm IDC in August.

Huawei achieved 19.6 percent yearon-year growth in the second quarter while Samsung and Apple made only mild gains of 1.4 percent and 1.5 percent, respective­ly, the IDC data showed.

Experts said that Huawei will not abandon the high-end market and it will keep trying to build its brand in that segment to compete with global rivals.

Huawei started raising its profile at the upper end of the market in 2015, when it released an array of premium smartphone­s, including the Mate and Ascend P models.

On October 16, Huawei launched its latest smartphone in Germany, with the flagship product kicking off the new era of intelligen­t phones that use artificial intelligen­ce.

Head of the Mobile China Alliance

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 ?? Photo: IC ?? Yu Chengdong, CEO of Huawei’s consumer business group, presents new Huawei Mate 10 and Mate 10 Pro phones in Munich, Germany on October 16.
Photo: IC Yu Chengdong, CEO of Huawei’s consumer business group, presents new Huawei Mate 10 and Mate 10 Pro phones in Munich, Germany on October 16.
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