Business Standard

AT&T not selling Huawei smartphone in US

- PAUL MOZUR Shanghai, 10 January

The newest smartphone from Huawei was meant to show Americans what China can do with technology. Instead, Huawei’s push to sell the phone in the US has suddenly lost a powerful backer — and the push has attracted some unwanted scrutiny from Washington.

AT&T walked away from a deal to sell the Huawei smartphone, the Mate 10, to customers in the US just before the partnershi­p was set to be unveiled, two people familiar with the plans said on Tuesday. The Wall Street Journal reported earlier that AT&T had changed plans. The reasons that led to AT&T’s shift were not entirely clear. But last month, a group of lawmakers wrote a letter to the Federal Communicat­ions Commission expressing misgivings about a potential deal between Huawei and an unnamed American telecommun­ications company to sell its consumer products in the United States. It cited longstandi­ng concerns among some lawmakers about what they said were Huawei’s ties to the Chinese government.

The letter, which was reviewed by The New York Times, said Congress had “long been concerned about Chinese espionage in general, and Huawei’s role in that espionage in particular.” While the letter did not mention AT&T, its pending deal to sell the Huawei smartphone in the US had been widely reported. Fletcher Cook, a spokesman for AT&T, declined to comment. Huawei has long denied that it presents security risks. In a statement, Huawei said it had delivered “premium devices with integrity globally and in the US market” over the past five years, adding that it would introduce new products for the American market on Tuesday.

The lastminute disruption is a setback for Huawei, which has struggled for years with political opposition to its efforts to tap the hugely valuable US market. More broadly, it underscore­s a deepening political rift over issues of technology, user privacy and security — a rift that adds to a brewing trade dispute between the world’s two largest economies.

Just a week ago, an affiliate of the Alibaba Group in China dropped a $1.2 billion proposal to acquire MoneyGram, after a United States panel that reviews foreign takeovers did not endorse it. The deal drew heavy criticism from lawmakers over the possibilit­y of Chinese access to American user data, despite assurances from the Chinese company that it would take steps to make the data more secure. AT&T, meanwhile, faces its own challenges in the United States.

The Justice Department in November sued to block the company’s $85.4 billion bid for Time Warner, a merger that would create a media and telecommun­ications behemoth with the ability to reach consumers through a wide variety of means.

Huawei has been counting on the Mate 10 to compete with Apple’s high-end iPhones, in a test of the potential appeal of a Chinese brand in the American market.

Huawei sells smartphone­s in the United States, but it does not have smartphone deals with any of the major wireless carriers in the country. Those carriers — Verizon, AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile — dominate the market, making it more difficult for Huawei to get a foothold in the country. The AT&T deal was supposed to cement the company’s status as a top maker of the devices, alongside Apple and Samsung Electronic­s of South Korea.

Congressio­nal misgivings about the company’s close relationsh­ip with the Chinese government have long plagued Huawei. Already, other major telecommun­ications companies refuse to buy the equipment Huawei makes for telecommun­ications networks — its core business — because of worries in Washington over security.

AT&T walked away from a deal to sell the Huawei smartphone in the US just before the partnershi­p was set to be unveiled

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Richard Yu, CEO of the Huawei Consumer Business Group, holding a Huawei Mate 10 Pro cellphone, speaks at the Huawei keynote at CES in Las Vegas on Tuesday
PHOTO: REUTERS Richard Yu, CEO of the Huawei Consumer Business Group, holding a Huawei Mate 10 Pro cellphone, speaks at the Huawei keynote at CES in Las Vegas on Tuesday

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