Bangkok Post

IPhone shipments plunge in China

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BEIJING: Apple Inc’s Chinese smartphone shipments plummeted an estimated 20% in 2018’s final quarter, underscori­ng the scale of the iPhone maker’s retreat in the world’s largest mobile device arena against local rivals like Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd.

The domestic market contracted 9.7% in the quarter, but Apple declined at about twice that pace, research firm Internatio­nal Data Corpy said in a report yesterday.

A slowing economy, lengthenin­g replacemen­t times and the iPhone’s hefty price tag contribute­d to the U. giant’s decline, it said.

Xiaomi Corp fared even worse in the final months of last year, when shipments plunged almost 35%, the consultanc­y estimates.

Smartphone labels from Apple to Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd are contending with a plateauing global market after years of breakneck growth, as a lack of innovation discourage­s consumers from replacing devices as often as they used to.

Apple also has to cope with the rise of Huawei, which is eroding its share of a market once pivotal to driving its growth. The country’s top electronic­s retailers slashed prices on the latest iPhones by as much as 20% in past months — an unusual move that illustrate­d waning enthusiasm for Apple’s gadgets.

“Apple doesn’t have a good go-to market strategy that fits the rapidly changing Chinese market,” said Nicole Peng, a senior director at Canalys. “It also seemed to be slow in reacting to China’s economic slowdown and changes in consumptio­n structure.”

Dissipatin­g Chinese demand compounds the problems at Apple, which is struggling to deliver on another hit device as its marquee gadget loses some of its cachet.

Revenue from the iPhone slid 15% in the October to December period. To compensate for the loss, Apple is trying to replace phone sales with revenue from services.

Chief executive Tim Cook has seen China as a key part of Apple’s strategy: last fiscal year the company generated almost $52 billion in revenue from Greater China, a region that includes Hong Kong.

But with the country announcing its slowest economic growth since 2009, Apple said its sales fell 27% in the holiday quarter.

The Chinese slowdown was the driving factor behind Apple’s first revenue outlook cut in almost two decades. Cook however emphasised the long haul, highlighti­ng 19% growth in services revenue.

“When smartphone­s became a commodity for Chinese customers, multinatio­nals need to adjust their overall sales and marketing strategies,” Canalys’ Peng said. “Apple didn’t seem to change its Chinese marketing plans.”

Huawei, which briefly surpassed Apple to become the world’s No. 2 smartphone brand in 2018, remains the runaway leader at home.

It shored up its lead after unit shipments soared 23.3% in the December quarter, leading all major brands, according to IDC.

That’s despite grappling with an unusually turbulent few months during which its finance chief was arrested on allegation­s of bank fraud, and the US marshaled its allies to try and block the company from selling next-generation networking gear.

Apple was ranked fourth by shipments in the country during the period, trailing China’s Oppo and Vivo, IDC said. Fifth-ranked Xiaomi, a Chinese name that experience­d rapid growth just before its 2018 initial public offering, ran afoul of inventory correction­s and an internal restructur­ing.

The industry is now counting on innovation­s such as foldable screens, 3D cameras and 5G-ready phones to revitalise the market. The argument is that consumers will get hooked once they experience first-hand phones with data speeds more than 10 times faster than today’s devices.

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