South China Morning Post

Gree ‘disbanding smartphone unit’ as sales decrease

- Xinmei Shen xinmei.shen@scmp.com

Gree Electric, one of China’s biggest air-conditione­r makers, is reportedly disbanding its smartphone unit after seven years amid sluggish consumer spending on electronic devices.

The Zhuhai-based firm has disbanded the core team of its smartphone business, which at its peak employed 100 people in the southern tech hub of Shenzhen, according to a report by media outlet Jiemian.

Gree did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment yesterday.

In response to the reported closure of its smartphone team, the company told news outlets that the research and developmen­t of Gree smartphone­s was “ongoing”.

The air-conditioni­ng giant first unveiled its smartphone ambitions in 2015, when chairwoman Dong Mingzhu, one of China’s most prominent businesswo­men, said Gree could “easily surpass” Xiaomi in the smartphone market.

The smartphone­s drew controvers­y when launched in 2015 as the handset had an opening image that featured a portrait of Dong.

The outspoken executive also boasted at a shareholde­rs meeting in June last year that Gree smartphone­s were as good as iPhones from American tech giant Apple.

But handsets offered by the home appliance maker still have not made it to the mainstream, trailing far behind China’s most popular smartphone brands such as Oppo, Vivo, Huawei and Xiaomi.

Gree’s official website dedicated to its smartphone products is no longer accessible, and the main Gree website only lists two smartphone models for sale. The company has not updated the WeChat public account for its smartphone business since April 2020, and did not mention its smartphone operation in the company’s 2022 annual report.

The firm’s flounderin­g smartphone operations come amid continuous headwinds in the country’s mobile device market.

Smartphone shipments in China fell by 11 per cent in the first quarter to their lowest level in a decade, according to market research firm Canalys. The report, published last month, said that Chinese smartphone shipments dropped to 67.6 million units, the lowest shipment numbers for the quarter ended March since 2013.

A separate report by consultanc­y Counterpoi­nt last month also estimated that China’s smartphone sales fell by 5 per cent in the first quarter of this year to their lowest level for the period since 2014.

While China’s post-pandemic economy had shown a moderate or mixed recovery, consumer spending had not rebounded enough to shore up smartphone sales, Canalys analysts told the Post last month.

“Economic vitality has rebounded after the easing of Covid-19 restrictio­ns, but it has not brought any significan­t boost to the demand for smartphone­s,” said Lucas Zhong, an analyst at the research firm.

“The pandemic affected consumer behaviour in the medium to long term, where consumers tended to spend their income on necessary expenses,” Zhong said.

[Economic revival] has not brought any significan­t boost to the demand for smartphone­s

LUCAS ZHONG, ANALYST, CANALYS

While research firm IDC said last month that Oppo was China’s top smartphone vendor in the first quarter, with 19.6 per cent of the market, Canalys said that Apple took the top spot in the country in the first quarter with 20 per cent of the market, shipping 13.3 million devices.

In February, Apple cut prices for its iPhone 14 models by up to 850 yuan (HK$947) to boost sales in China amid weaker demand.

The global smartphone industry has also been struggling for years as consumers hold onto their devices for longer. Worldwide smartphone shipments fell by 13 per cent to 269.8 million in the first quarter, according to Canalys.

Samsung Electronic­s and Apple maintained their top spots for the quarter, together accounting for 43 per cent of the global smartphone market.

Xiaomi, Oppo and Vivo rounded out the top five, with a combined 29 per cent of the global market.

 ?? ?? Gree smartphone­s have not made it to the mainstream in China.
Gree smartphone­s have not made it to the mainstream in China.

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