The Borneo Post

Analysts cut iPhone X forecasts, citing lukewarm demand

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APPLE seems to having a miserable festive season.

Analysts have lowered iPhone X shipment projection­s for the first quarter of next year, citing signs of lacklustre demand at the end of the holiday shopping season.

Sinolink Securities analyst Zhang Bin said in a report this week that handset shipments in the period may be as low as 35 million, or 10 million less than he previously estimated.

“After the first wave of demand has been fulfilled, the market now worries that the high price of the iPhone X may weaken demand in the first quarter,” Zhang wrote.

JL Warren Capital LLC said shipments will drop to 25 million units in the first quarter of 2018 from 30 million units in the fourth quarter, citing reduced orders at some Apple suppliers.

The drop reflects “weak demand because of the iPhone X’s high price point and a lack of interestin­g innovation­s,” the New York-based research firm said in note to clients.

“Bad news here is that highly publicised and promoted X did not boost the global demand for iPhone X,” according to the note.

Apple has been counting on a redesigned 10th anniversar­y iPhone to boost shipments as its market value advances toward US$1 trillion.

The Cupertino, California­based company is facing new challenges from Samsung Electronic­s, which is quickly recovering from the Galaxy Note 7’s recall after fires. In the meantime, Chinese brands such as Huawei, Oppo and Xiaomi are also luring away potential customers in China and other emerging markets such as India.

Apple is said to have trimmed its first-quarter sales forecast to 30 million units from 50 million, Taiwanese newspaper Economic Daily News reported, citing unidentifi­ed supply chain officials. It also said Hon Hai Precision Industry’s main iPhone X manufactur­ing hub in Zhengzhou, China, stopped recruiting workers.

The company also known as Foxconn is the sole iPhone X assembler, and also makes the handsets in Shenzhen and Chengdu.

An Apple representa­tive declined to comment on production arrangemen­ts. Foxconn said in an emailed statement that company policy prevents it from commenting on such matters.

Last week, Apple received a rare downgrade from Nomura Instinet analyst Jeffrey Kvaal, who said iPhone X sales as well as other positive factors are already baked into the stock price. He lowered his rating to “neutral” from “buy.”

Apple’s efforts to increase iPhone X production in recent months have made supply and demand fairly balanced at the moment, said Jia Mo, an analyst at Canalys in Shanghai.

“The market will still hold high expectatio­ns for Apple’s 2018 products if Apple introduces more devices with iPhone X’s key features to cover a wider price range,” he said. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? First customers display their iPhone X sets at an Apple showroom in Sydney in November. — AFP photo
First customers display their iPhone X sets at an Apple showroom in Sydney in November. — AFP photo

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