Arab News

Huawei ekes out third-quarter revenue growth as US restrictio­ns bite

Chinese company launches what may be its last smartphone in the high-end Android segment

- Reuters Shanghai

Huawei Technologi­es eked out a gain in third-quarter revenue as the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic added to supply-chain difficulti­es brought about by US restrictio­ns on doing business with the Chinese firm.

The figure comes a day after the telecommun­ications equipment maker announced its latest flagship smartphone, potentiall­y its last in the high-end Android segment most dependent on US technology.

It also comes after Sweden became the latest nation to ban Huawei from its fifth-generation (5G) network infrastruc­ture, following US suspicion of Huawei’s relationsh­ip with China’s communist government — which Huawei has dismissed. Hinting at an end to at least four years of double-digit growth, revenue grew 9.9 percent in JanuarySep­tember versus the same period a year earlier to 671.3 billion yuan ($100.4 billion), the private company said in a statement on Friday without providing a segment breakdown. Revenue for the third quarter alone rose 3.7 percent on year to 217.3 billion yuan, Reuters’ calculatio­ns showed.

Net profit margin for the nine months was 8 percent, versus 8.7 percent over the same period a year earlier, Huawei said.

The US effectivel­y cut off Huawei’s access to US software and chipmaking equipment in the spring, following similar measures in May 2019 that are gradually taking effect. Huawei’s line of Kirin chips, designed in-house, helped catapult the firm to the top of the global handset market.

Earlier this

year,

however,

Consumer Business Group Chief Executive Richard Yu said US restrictio­ns meant Huawei would soon stop making high-end Kirin chips. Analysts expect its stockpile of the chips to run out next year. On Thursday, in a livestream Yu unveiled Huawei’s latest flagship smartphone series, the Mate 40.

The device, priced at 4,499 yuan for the feature-light version, comes equipped with the Kirin 9000 chipset, manufactur­ed at the 5nm process node that only Apple and Qualcomm have been able to bring to market at scale. The Mate 40, however, could be the company’s last device of its kind. Already, consumers in China have rushed to buy Huawei smartphone­s on concerns over the availabili­ty of newer models.

Meanwhile, overseas sales have been sluggish due in part to US restrictio­ns blocking Huawei’s access to Alphabet’s Google Mobile Services.

Mo Jia, who tracks the global smartphone sector at researcher Canalys, said the Mate 40 will likely sell well in China, though total sales will suffer from supply-chain issues. “Huawei won’t find it hard to sell the Mate 40 series, as most of the shipment will go to China,” Jia said. “But it can only produce limited units powered by the Kirin 9000 series, which will impact the number of the Mate 40 phones it can ship.”

Reflecting its manufactur­ing difficulti­es, Reuters reported last week that Huawei was talking to Digital China Group and others to sell parts of its Honor budget handset business in a deal that could fetch up to 25 billion yuan.

Premium rival Apple began selling two of its latest flagship iPhones in stores worldwide on Friday, with analysts expecting the US firm to take market share from Huawei as the pair dominate the high-end handset segment in China.

 ?? AFP ?? Consumers in China have rushed to buy Huawei smartphone­s such as the new Mate 40 on concerns over the availabili­ty of newer models.
AFP Consumers in China have rushed to buy Huawei smartphone­s such as the new Mate 40 on concerns over the availabili­ty of newer models.

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