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Xiaomi snaps up Nokia patents to galvanise global drive

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BEIJING: Xiaomi Corp has acquired a swathe of patents from Nokia Oyj, making its latest acquisitio­n of technology to drive a global expansion.

The Chinese smartphone maker is getting its hands on a trove of intellectu­al property from the Finnish company that once led the world in phone sales before Apple Inc ushered in the smartphone era.

The deal expands a portfolio augmented last year by the purchase of some 1,500 patents from Microsoft Corp, and may help smooth over potential legal tangles abroad.

Under their agreement, Xiaomi will buy patents from Nokia for an undisclose­d sum, while the two companies have agreed to share essential licensing rights.

Xiaomi, which has slipped in global smartphone rankings since 2014, is angling to make a comeback through investment­s in retail stores at home while fine-tuning an overseas expansion that’s slowed with the departure of former internatio­nal honcho Hugo Barra.

For now, it’s focusing on a selection of emerging markets including India, Russia and Indonesia. But the company has said it intended to establish a presence in the US, where it’s held off on selling phones in favour of cheaper devices such as fitness bands.

“We only want good assets. So both parties can get what they want,” Wang Xiang, who’s replaced Barra as the chief steward of Xiaomi’s internatio­nal efforts, said in an interview.

Once the biggest smartphone vendor in China, Xiaomi’s shipments plunged in 2016 and the company was ranked by IDC just fifth in Chinese phone shipments in the first quarter, lagging local players like Huawei Technologi­es Co. It’s going through a major transforma­tion anchored in part by a major push into old-fashioned retail: it plans to build 1,000 “Mi Home” stores by 2019 – about twice Apple’s global store count – targeting 70 billion yuan (US$10bil) of retail sales by 2021.

The other plank of its envisioned comeback is investment­s in technology. Its Pinecone smartphone processor debuted in February in a mid-tier phone available only in China, but is expected to expand to other models in time.

It’s investing more heavily in research as well as building its ecosystem, a network of about 100 companies it’s invested in that produce products from earbuds to robot vacuums bearing the Mi brand.

Nokia will also provide networking gear to Xiaomi as part of their agreement.

 ??  ?? Wang: ‘We only want good assets. So both parties can get what they want.’
Wang: ‘We only want good assets. So both parties can get what they want.’

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