Fiji Sun

Huawei warns China will strike back against new U.S. restrictio­ns

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The Huawei warned on Tuesday that 2020 would be its most difficult year yet due to American trade restrictio­ns which dealt a blow to its overseas sales in 2019, and predicted the Chinese government would retaliate against the United States.

The world’s largest maker of telecoms equipment issued the warning as it reported its weakest annual profit growth in three years.

It said Beijing could hit back against US measures to restrict chip sales to Huawei, by restrictin­g sales of American products in China and by shifting to alternativ­e suppliers in China and South Korea.

“The Chinese government will not just stand by and watch Huawei be slaughtere­d on the chopping board,” Chairman Eric Xu told reporters at the launch of Huawei’s annual report.

“Why wouldn’t the Chinese government ban the use of 5G chips or 5G chip-powered base stations, smartphone­s and other smart devices provided by American companies, for cybersecur­ity reasons?” The United States alleges the Chinese government could use Huawei’s equipment to spy, an accusation rejected by the company. Washington placed Huawei on a blacklist in May last year, citing national security concerns, restrictin­g sales of U.S.-made goods to the company. U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion is also preparing further measures that will seek to restrict the supply of chips to the company, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters this month.

Curbing sales of chips

One of the sources said the rulechange is aimed at curbing sales of chips to Huawei by Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co (2330. TW), the world’s largest contract chip maker and a major producer of chips for Huawei’s HiSilicon division.

“Even if this situation you mentioned happened, Huawei and also other Chinese companies can choose to buy chipsets from Samsung from Korea, MTK from Taiwan, and [Unisoc] in China, and use those companies to develop chips,” Huawei’s Xu said.

Xu, however, predicted 2020 would be the most difficult year yet for the company because of the U.S. measures and warned that further export restrictio­ns could destroy global tech supply chains.

Smartphone­s strong

Huawei Technologi­es [HWT.UL] said net profit for 2019 came in at 62.7 billion yuan (US$8.9bn), up 5.6 per cent - its weakest growth in three years, and down from 25 per cent jump a year earlier.

Its carrier business, which includes 5G mobile network equipment, saw sales rise just 3.8 per cent.

Liang Hua, chairman of the board, said the company would have to adapt to the U.S. restrictio­ns as well as the coronaviru­s pandemic. Overall revenue rose 19% to 858.8 billion yuan, helped by a 34% jump in sales for its consumer business unit, which includes smartphone­s. That was mainly driven by China, where sales surged 36.2 per cent to 506.7 billion yuan.

In contrast, revenue from the AsiaPacifi­c region excluding China fell 13.9 per cent, while in Europe and the Middle East sales grew just 0.7 per cent.

Huawei dominated smartphone sales in China, taking a 38.5 per cent share of the market in 2019 compared with 27 per cent a year earlier, according to research firm Canalys.

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