Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Amid U.S. pressure, gains seen by Huawei

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BEIJING — Huawei Technologi­es, the Chinese tech giant, looks set to record strong growth again this year despite the efforts of President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to shut it out of internatio­nal markets because of security concerns.

The Shenzhen-based company has steadily ramped up the smartphone side of its business, an area that is much harder for the Trump administra­tion to hobble, but it has also apparently managed to double the number of contracts it has won for 5G technology.

“They are on track to do far better than in 2017 or 2018,” Mark Natkin, managing director of Marbridge Consulting in Beijing, said after reviewing Huawei’s latest financial report.

“As long as they can continue to grow their consumer business and continue to convince operators outside the U.S. that their equipment is safe and high-quality and cost-effective, they will keep recording strong results,” he said.

Huawei, which is not a publicly listed company and thus is not required to publish its accounts, releases a selection of figures each

quarter in an gesture toward transparen­cy. However, the figures are not audited and are not complete.

In Wednesday’s release of third-quarter figures, the company did not give stand-alone numbers for the three-month period but instead rolled them in with figures from the first half of the year, making it difficult to discern quarterly trends.

The figures showed that Huawei’s revenue was 24.4% higher in the nine months ending with September than they were in the same period last year, growing to $86 billion. Given that the company reported revenue growth of 39% in the first three months,

this suggests that earnings have slowed sharply over the course of this year.

Still, Huawei appears to be faring better than in the past two years, when it recorded 16% revenue growth for 2017 and 20% last year.

This performanc­e comes despite Washington’s global campaign to stop government­s and telecommun­ications companies from buying Huawei’s next-generation equipment, citing concerns that it could be used by the Chinese government to collect intelligen­ce and otherwise conduct surveillan­ce.

Founded in 1987 by former People’s Liberation Army engineer Ren Zhengfei, Huawei has grown into a corporate behemoth that exemplifie­s the Communist Party’s vision for the country’s future: advanced

high tech and entirely Chinese.

But its emergence has been met with growing suspicions about its links to the ruling party and whether the company might be acting on the party’s behalf.

The Trump administra­tion has been trying to shut Huawei out of its telecommun­ications market and persuade other government­s around the world to do the same.

The administra­tion has turned up the heat on Huawei in other ways, as well. In May, President Donald Trump signed an executive order essentiall­y prohibitin­g U.S. companies from buying telecommun­ications equipment from Huawei.

It also placed Huawei and 70 of its affiliates on a blacklist, banning them from buying parts and components from

American companies without U.S. government approval. However, the United States has granted two reprieves to allow limited sales to continue until Nov. 19.

Huawei neverthele­ss has been stockpilin­g American parts and funding other supply chains. In August, it unveiled its own operating system, HarmonyOS, which it plans to put in its smartphone­s if it loses the ability to use Google’s Android system.

Huawei founder Ren has said he expects these efforts to shave about $10 billion off annual revenue.

Separately, Meng Wanzhou, Ren’s daughter and Huawei’s chief financial officer, is fighting extraditio­n from Canada to the United States, where she is wanted on allegation­s of breaching

American sanctions against trading with Iran.

She has been under house arrest in Vancouver since December.

Extraditio­n proceeding­s against her are due to start in January and are expected to take the better part of a year.

Even the bare-bones financial numbers Huawei releases offer some insights into its strategy for weathering this campaign. It appears to be boosting its smartphone business in an apparent attempt to limit the United States’ ability to cripple it by targeting its 5G technology.

Huawei, the second-largest smartphone maker in the world since it overtook Apple earlier this year, said it shipped more than 185 million smartphone­s in the first nine months of this year.

That means it has shipped 26% more handsets so far this year than in the first nine months of last year.

At this rate, it is on course to reach its target of selling 250 million smartphone­s this year, up considerab­ly from the 206 million sold in 2018.

But it was the compositio­n of Huawei’s business that caught the attention of Natkin, the tech analyst.

In 2017, 49% of Huawei’s revenue came from its sales of equipment to telecommun­ications companies around the world. That fell to 41% last year and then to 36.5% in the first half of this year.

Conversely, the proportion of revenue coming from its consumer business, which includes phones, rose from 40% to 48% to 55% over the same period.

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