China Daily

GOING GLOBAL

Fiberhome Tech rides B&R to wire up the entire world

- By OUYANG SHIJIA in Beijing and ZHOU LIHUA in Wuhan contact the writers at ouyangshij­ia@chinadaily.com.cn

Fiberhome Technologi­es Group, a State-owned enterprise or SOE specializi­ng in IT and telecom products and solutions, is deepening its overseas operations to quicken its growth momentum.

“We have seen multiple opportunit­ies in the global IT and telecom markets, especially in countries and regions participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative,” Yu Shaohua, vicepresid­ent of Fiberhome and an academicia­n of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, said.

After decades of developmen­t, Fiberhome, based in Wuhan, Hubei province in Central China, has made a name, and money, for itself.

Controlled by the State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission of the State Council, Fiberhome held the top spot in optic fiber cable exports for the past six years.

Last year, it ranked among the world’s top five opto-electronic device companies in terms of annual revenues and top four enterprise­s globally in income from optic fiber cable sales. It also ranked fourth in optic fiber network globally.

Currently, the company exports products to more than 90 countries and regions, including Malaysia, Thailand, Russia, Spain, France, Germany, the United States and Peru.

Yu said the group’s revenue was around 36 billion yuan ($5.67 billion) in 2017, com- pared to 16 billion yuan in sales in 2012.

“We’ve seen a significan­t increase of 20 billion yuan (in sales revenue) over the past five years, among which more than one-fifth comes from overseas markets,” Yu said.

Fiberhome now wants to expand more into emerging markets where it sees a lot of potential for growth, particular­ly in countries and regions participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative. For, communicat­ion infrastruc­ture is less developed there.

“We aim to generate more than 50 billion yuan in revenues in the next few years, and revenues from overseas markets are expected to account for a larger proportion of the total,” Yu said.

To realize its ambitious goal, the group is looking not just to expand internatio­nally but to focus on facilitati­ng localizati­on in overseas markets.

Fiberhome said it would set up more offices and service networks globally as well as hire more salespeopl­e to better serve the global needs.

Proposed by China in 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative is aimed at creating a trade and infrastruc­ture network connecting Asia with Europe and Africa along the ancient Silk Road routes.

For Fiberhome, the initiative could open doors to many markets outside China. For, thanks to the initiative, trade between China and other markets related to the Belt and Road Initiative reached $786 billion in the first three quarters of last year, up by 15 percent year-on-year.

Chinese businesses directly invested $9.6 billion in economies related to the initiative, up almost 30 percent year-onyear.

Deborah Lehr, CEO and founding partner of Basilinna, a US-based strategic business consulting firm, said as more Chinese companies are ramping up efforts to expand globally, they need to be aware of the challenges ahead as well.

“For the large infrastruc­ture projects, the biggest issues are political risk and how participan­ts find measures to mitigate against foreign exchange risk. Any fluctuatio­ns in foreign exchange can eradicate the returns, or government changes can have an impact.”

Yu agreed, adding that the Belt and Road Initiative actually helps mitigate risks for Chinese enterprise to expand globally. China’s influence is expected to grow in the next few years on the back of the B&R Initiative, he said.

“Because of the initiative, many countries now have a better understand­ing of China. And a growing number of Chinese companies are targeting the Belt and Road economies, which will help increase China’s presence globally.”

Nick Tubb, Asia Pacific general manager for Ingenico ePayments of France, said as Chinese companies continue to expand globally, they must continue to be more aware of the cultural challenges in overseas markets.

“In order to develop in the overseas markets, they need to better understand consumer behaviors and real needs.”

Fiberhome has done precisely that and intends to continue in that vein. To cope with the challenges, the company has set up factories and offices in overseas markets based on the local clients’ specific needs.

For example, it has a fiber cable factory in South America and opto-electronic device factories in Europe to cater to local markets’ specific needs.

Now, Fiberhome is striving to transform its IT and communicat­ion technologi­es involving cloud infrastruc­ture, cloud applicatio­ns and digital life, while continuing to gear up to be more competitiv­e in the optical communicat­ion market globally.

“We’ll mainly pursue optical communicat­ion growth in overseas markets, and hope the overseas business will become a key driving force for our future growth,” Yu said.

New Delhi, in 2017.

We’ve seen sales revenue increase by 20 billion yuan over the past five years ...”

Yu Shaohua, vice-president of Fiberhome Technologi­es and an academicia­n of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g

 ??  ??
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAIL ?? A staff member of Fiberhome Technologi­es Group introduces products to a customer at an exhibition in Singapore.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAIL A staff member of Fiberhome Technologi­es Group introduces products to a customer at an exhibition in Singapore.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Research and developmen­t staff of the Indian unit of Fiberhome Technologi­es Group test products in
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Research and developmen­t staff of the Indian unit of Fiberhome Technologi­es Group test products in

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