New Straits Times

How Apple-linked firms fare on road to trillionai­re status

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NEW YORK: Apple Inc’s rise to become a US$1 trillion (RM4.08 trillion) company is a story of innovation, new possibilit­ies and one iconic product.

A posse of suppliers and partners has been part of the journey by selling key components, assembling the devices, or simply connecting iPhones to their networks.

How some of these companies fared in comparison to the superstar they shadowed over the past 11 years, from the time Apple hit a US$100 billion valuation in May 2007 to last week when it became what could be called a “trunicorn”.

Two companies stand out as crucial parts of Apple’s supply chain throughout that time.

Taiwan’s Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (Foxconn) is without a doubt the iPhone inventor’s most important partner. Not only has it been the chief assembler of the devices, it also makes a lot of the components including metal casings and display modules.

Yet Hon Hai’s upside from Apple’s success has been minimal. Chairman Terry Gou has consistent­ly failed to leverage his pole position in the supply chain into superior revenue, net income and market-cap growth, especially when compared to Samsung Electronic­s Co.

South Korea’s biggest company had an early relationsh­ip with Apple, supplying flash storage chips back in the iPod era. It then became a primary supplier of the core processor in iPhones. After Apple dragged smartphone­s into the 21st century with hardware and software innovation­s, Samsung followed — indeed, Apple’s Steve Jobs accused it of copying — to become the world’s biggest maker of the devices.

The company’s rise hasn’t matched that of Apple, but it’s done exceedingl­y well.

Thanks to this explosion in smartphone­s, hitherto unknown suppliers like Shenzhen-listed OFilm Tech Co and Largan Precision Industry Co of Taiwan also got their shot at glory, and they took it. Both have since won orders from non-Apple clients, helping them keep the growth momentum.

They’re not alone. Apple lists more than 200 suppliers in its annual supply chain report.

Meanwhile, telecom companies like AT&T Inc were set to benefit from demand for faster networks due to the popularity of social media and mobile video. This didn’t quite pan out as expected.

Profitabil­ity is the cloud hanging over Apple. Some of its entourage face similar headwinds. Hon Hai’s margins have shrunk, as have O-Film’s. Yet Samsung and Largan have managed to keep expanding profitabil­ity by balancing research and developmen­t and other costs.

In the future, the key for all of those in the Apple posse will be how to offer products of such value that the hippest clients can’t do without them. That may even mean dumping Apple itself in order to find a new megastar.

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