Business Standard

PRICE RISE: OTHER SMARTPHONE MAKERS WON’T TAKE APPLE ROUTE

- ARNAB DUTTA & VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

Despite a five percentage point increase in the basic customs duty on mobile handsets, smartphone makers such as Xiaomi, Oppo and Vivo are not mulling price hikes. Instead, the plan, according to top industry sources, is to absorb the duty hike to protect price points in a highly competitiv­e market.

The move comes even as rival Apple has increased the prices of all its top models, excluding the iPhone SE, which is assembled in India. The hike is to the tune of 3.5 per cent and is with immediate effect.

However, other players in the ~45,000 and above super-premium segment may face challenges. For example, Sony and Google continue to import the majority of their handsets into the country.

Sony imported some 20,000 devices last year and Google shipped in 37,000 finishedmo­bile phones. These two companies might have to revise their pricing strategies in India and could hike prices soon, sources said. Samsung, on the other hand, assembles all its devices, including the flagship Galaxy S and Note series of smartphone­s, in India.

While Apple had chosen to pass on the duty hike to consumers, for Xiaomi, Oppo and Vivo that option did not exist, sources said. The reason being the nature of the ~1 lakh crore smartphone market in India. The trend, an executive told Business Standard, was to provide an “A-list model at a B-list price”.

“Consumers have now become more price and value conscious and are looking for smartphone­s that are affordable, yet loaded with high-end features. This space has become increasing­ly competitiv­e and each brand is coming out with products that address this need,” Amit Gujral, chief marketing officer, LG Electronic­s India, had said in an earlier conversati­on with Business Standard.

Companies that have pushed the pedal on this “affordable premium experience” are Xiaomi, Oppo and Vivo and even Samsung and Lenovo. It is unclear whether the last two will go in for price hikes following decisions by Xiaomi, Oppo and Vivo not to do so. Executives at Samsung were not immediatel­y available for comment. Sudhin Mathur, managing director, Motorola Mobility India, said, “Our journey of making in India began three years ago and we are well on our way to becoming a fully locally manufactur­ed (brand).”

Most smartphone makers today source the majority of their requiremen­ts locally barring Apple, which has restricted local production to the iPhone SE. Industry sources said around five per cent of volume sales of brands such as Xiaomi, Oppo, Vivo and Lenovo were of imported handsets, implying that these companies saw sense in switching to local production. Apple, on the other hand, imports over 80 per cent of its requiremen­ts.

The question is whether the US major will follow its global counterpar­ts in India. Sources said the Cupertino-based major’s manufactur­ing plans in India were still unclear. The super-premium smartphone segment contribute­s ~8,000-10,000 crore by value and 2-2.5 per cent in terms of volumes to the domestic smartphone market.

While Apple might not switch to local production immediatel­y, sources said it would be conscious of whether duty hikes such as the one announced last week made its products unaffordab­le beyond a point.

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