China Daily

Profitable Huawei to better serve clients

Large chip inventory, 2020 revenue growth may soften COVID, US impact

- By ZHOU MO and MA SI Contact the writers at sally@chinadaily­hk.com

Huawei Technologi­es Co said on Wednesday that it has the ability to satisfy the needs of its customers, especially various enterprise­s, as the company has poured a large amount of cash over the past two years to build up its stockpiles of chips in response to US government restrictio­ns.

The statement came after the company said it generated 891.4 billion yuan ($135.9 billion) in global sales revenue in 2020, growing 3.8 percent year-on-year, despite the impact from the COVID-19 pandemic and US government restrictio­ns.

The Chinese telecom equipment maker and smartphone vendor said its net profit rose 3.2 percent on a yearly basis to 64.6 billion yuan in 2020.

“Over the past year, we have remained strong in the face of adversity,” Hu Houkun, rotating chairman of Huawei, said during the company’s annual earnings conference at its headquarte­rs in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.

Huawei’s telecom business group posted revenue of 302.6 billion yuan last year, up 0.2 percent from a year earlier, partly due to the Chinese telecom operators’ efforts to accelerate the 5G rollout, and increased purchase of Huawei’s telecom gear.

Growth of the consumer business group which includes smartphone­s, smartwatch­es and other consumer electronic products, however, slowed last year, with growth coming in at 3.3 percent year-on-year to 482.9 billion yuan, as the US government restricted access to crucial chip components.

But Hu said that despite the difficulti­es, the company will continue rolling out its flagship smartphone models as scheduled. Huawei said by the end of last year, it had more than one billion people around the world using its devices, and among them, 730 million are smartphone users.

Hu said that the chip components the company has stockpiled are enough to serve its enterprise clients. “As for when the supply of crucial chips can be resumed, it will depend on the global semiconduc­tor supply chain’s cooperatio­n and improvemen­ts,” Hu said.

According to him, the US restrictio­ns on Huawei’s access to its technology are not only taking a toll on Huawei’s business, but also causing damage to players in the whole supply chain.

The UK chip firm ARM Holdings said on Wednesday that after a comprehens­ive review, it has decided that its latest ARMv9 chip design architectu­re is not subject to US export regulation­s, and already notified the relevant US government department­s.

The move is good news to Huawei as it will be able to use the latest ARMv9 architectu­re to design cutting-edge chips for its smartphone­s, servers and other devices, experts said.

Xiang Ligang, director-general of the Informatio­n Consumptio­n Alliance, said the relatively stable financial performanc­e of Huawei mirrors the company’s resilience amid mounting pressure, but challenges ahead will be tougher, especially within its smartphone business.

Nicole Peng, vice-president of mobility at Canalys, said earlier: “It is possibly Huawei’s toughest time as it is restrained in even serving its home market. Huawei’s sell-in shipments in the fourth quarter of 2020 shrunk by nearly half sequential­ly, despite huge demand for Huawei devices, as the company is unable to fulfill this demand in the foreseeabl­e future.”

Amid US government restrictio­ns, Huawei has been ramping up efforts to explore the Chinese market, including more efforts to expand its local cloud computing business and its smart photovolta­ic solutions to help Chinese enterprise­s cut their carbon footprint.

Such efforts have partly helped Huawei’s China business record a 15.4 percent year-on-year growth in revenue to 584.9 billion yuan in 2020. But business in the Americas dropped by 24.5 percent; in Europe, the Middle East and Africa by 12.2 percent and in the Asia-Pacific region by 8.7 percent.

Despite the decline in overseas business in 2020 amid the COVID19 pandemic, Hu is positive about this year’s performanc­e.

“Once the pandemic gets under control, we expect global demand to return to the uptrend territory. We have positive expectatio­ns on our revenue outside the Chinese market this year,” he said.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors look at descriptio­ns of Huawei products during an expo in Beijing.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Visitors look at descriptio­ns of Huawei products during an expo in Beijing.

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