Cape Times

HUAWEI’S OLIVE BRANCH TO APPLE

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CHINA’S Huawei Technologi­es said yesterday it had not held talks with Apple about supplying 5G chipsets, a day after its founder said it was open to selling such chips to the US firm, which has yet to unveil dates for a next-gen iPhone. Apple is behind rivals such as South Korea’s Samsung Electronic­s and Huawei in delivering a phone equipped with fifthgener­ation (5G) modems that is expected to provide fresh momentum in a slumping global smartphone market. Intel, the sole supplier of modem chips for iPhones, has said its 5G chips will not appear in mobile phones until 2020, raising the possibilit­y that Apple, its biggest customer, will be more than a year behind rivals in delivering a device that uses the faster 5G networks. Samsung started selling 5G phones in South Korea this month ahead of the global introducti­on of 5G networks, and Huawei, whose smartphone­s outsold iPhones in the fourth quarter, plans to launch a 5G phone in June. “We have not had discussion­s with Apple on this issue,” Huawei’s rotating chairperso­n Ken Hu said yesterday, adding that he looked forward to Apple’s competitio­n in the 5G phone market. His comment comes a day after CNBC published an interview with Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei that the firm was “open” to selling its 5G chips to Apple. Uncertaint­y over the availabili­ty of a 5G-equipped iPhone has weighed on the world’s most valuable company – at $939 billion (R13.24 trillion). Brokerage UBS earlier this month said Apple, battling falling iPhone sales, is increasing­ly in jeopardy of being unable to ship a 5G iPhone in 2020 which could cause nearterm headwind for it.

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