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China’s Huawei reports sales gain despite US sanctions

- AP Beijing

Chinese tech giant Huawei on Wednesday reported a doubledigi­t gain in sales despite US sanctions that threaten to disrupt its smartphone and network equipment businesses.

Huawei Technologi­es Ltd. said its sales rose 24.4 percent in the first nine months of 2019 to 610.8 billion yuan ($86 billion). That was faster than the 23.2 percent gain reported for the first half.

The announceme­nt followed US-Chinese trade talks in Washington that ended Friday with no word of progress on resolving Huawei’s status.

The Trump administra­tion, which accuses Huawei of being a security risk, imposed curbs in May on its access to US technology and components including

Google’s music, maps and other smartphone services. Washington has delayed enforcemen­t and suggested it might allow sales of some US technology. But Huawei’s chairman, Liang Hua, warned in July it would “face difficulti­es” in the second half.

Huawei says it is removing US components from its smartphone­s and network gear and has announced its own phone operating system to replace Google’s Android if necessary.

But no non-US supplier can fully replace Google music, maps and other services. Industry analysts say that might threaten Huawei’s status as the No. 2 global smartphone brand behind Samsung by sales volume.

Huawei said smartphone shipments rose 26 percent in the first nine months of 2019 over a year earlier, to 185 million units. US security warnings focus on Huawei’s status as the biggest supplier of network gear that forms the heart of telecom networks. Huawei denies accusation­s it facilitate­s Chinese spying or might install “backdoors” in its equipment for eavesdropp­ing. The company, China’s first global tech brand, is a leader in next-generation network technology meant to support self-driving cars and other new applicatio­ns. Its increased reach makes 5G technology more politicall­y sensitive.

Washington is lobbying European and other allies to ban Huawei from plans to upgrade networks to 5G. Germany, France and Ireland say they have no plans to ban any supplier.

A US official on Tuesday warned that Washington would reconsider sharing intelligen­ce with allies that use Huawei network equipment.

 ?? Reuters ?? Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China.
Reuters Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China.

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