BusinessMirror

Huawei, long resilient, suffers under tougher US pressure

- BY JOE MCDONALD The Associated Press

BEIJING—FOR nearly a decade, Huawei kept worldwide sales growing as Washington told US phone companies not to buy its network equipment and lobbied allies to reject China’s first global tech brand as a security threat. Focusing on Europe, Asia, Africa and China’s booming market, Huawei became the biggest maker of switching gear and a major smartphone brand. As the White House cut off access to American components and Google’s popular music and other smartphone services, Huawei unveiled its own processor chips and app developmen­t. Last year’s sales rose 19 percent to $123 billion.

Now, Huawei Technologi­es Ltd. is suffering in earnest as Washington intensifie­s a campaign to slam the door on access to foreign markets and components in its escalating feud with Beijing over technology and security. European and other phone carriers that bought Huawei gear despite US pressure are removing it from their networks.

Huawei got a flicker of good news when it passed rivals Samsung and Apple as the No. 1 smartphone brand in the quarter ending in June thanks to sales in China, but demand abroad is plunging.

“Huawei is losing market share quite dramatical­ly outside China,” said industry analyst Paul Budde. “Their internatio­nal position is most likely going to get worse rather than better.”

In the latest blow, the Commerce Department has confirmed the rules announced in May that will bar non-american companies from using US technology to make processor chips and other components for Huawei without a government license.

The president of Huawei’s consumer business, Richard Yu, says it is running out of chips for smartphone­s. Yu said as of September 15, contractor­s will be forced to stop making Kirin chips designed by Huawei’s engineers and used in its most advanced handsets. “This is a very big loss for us,” Yu said on August 8 at an industry conference, China Info 100.

Yu did not say how sales might be affected. Huawei declined comment on how it was responding.

Huawei heads a growing list of Chinese tech names the Trump administra­tion is targeting as security risks in an initiative dubbed “Clean Networks”. It wants countries to remove them as suppliers to telecom systems, undersea cables and smartphone app stores.

The White House has banned unspecifie­d transactio­ns with popular Chinese-owned social media apps Tiktok and Wechat. Washington is pressing Tiktok’s owner to sell the short-video app.

In June, the Pentagon added Huawei and video surveillan­ce company Hikvision to a list of companies it said were owned or controlled by the ruling Communist Party’s military wing.

Last year, the Chinese owner of Grindr was ordered to sell the dating app.

Huawei is hardly finished. It says sales rose 13 percent to 454 billion yuan ($65 billion) in the first half of 2020. And China is one of the biggest markets. But after spending a decade and billions of dollars to become a leader in next-generation technology, the company that says it serves 45 of the top 50 phone carriers faces the threat of being shut out of many major markets.

That is a setback for the Communist Party’s ambition to make China a global tech leader.

Western companies and consumers also may lose access to Huawei’s creativity and network gear that can cost 30 percent less than that from its rivals

Ericsson AB of Sweden and Finland’s Nokia Corp.

US, European and Japanese suppliers of processor chips and other technology stand to lose billions of dollars in potential sales to Huawei.

“It doesn’t benefit any country to exclude Huawei,” said Nikhil Batra of IDC.

The Trump administra­tion is ramping up pressure on European and other allies, including by threatenin­g to withhold intelligen­ce sharing if they allow Huawei into next-generation, or 5G, networks.

Huawei’s US market evaporated after the company and Chinese rival ZTE Corp. were declared security threats in 2012 by a congressio­nal panel. Small, rural carriers still use Huawei’s lower-cost equipment, but Washington is prodding them to stop.

Last year, Huawei raced to remove American components from its products after President Donald Trump blocked access to US processor chips and other technology including Google services. Huawei, ranked No. 6 on Boston Consulting Group’s list this year of the most innovative global companies, said sales went ahead without disruption.

The White House’s restrictio­ns on use of US technology to produce chips and other components for Huawei is more painful.

Huawei relies on vendors such as Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co., the world’s biggest contract chip producer. TSMC said this week it still was studying the new rules.

The Communist Party has fought back by threatenin­g unspecifie­d consequenc­es against countries that block Huawei’s market access.

After the latest sanctions, the foreign ministry called on Washington to “stop suppressin­g Chinese companies.” The party also is stepping up a decadesold campaign to build up China’s own chip-making industry. This month, Beijing announced new tax breaks for semiconduc­tor makers.

In Europe, which supplied one-quarter of Huawei’s 2019 sales, Germany and France are deciding what role it can play in 5G. Britain agreed in January to a limited presence but changed course in July and banned Huawei from its mobile networks.

“There is a bit of panic” among European carriers, said Budde. “There are hectic negotiatio­ns” with other suppliers. British mobile carrier BT and Vodaphone Group Plc. are removing Huawei from their European networks. Vodafone has warned that rolling out 5G in Europe could be delayed by up to five years if other government­s impose British-style limits.

“It would be hugely disruptive,” CEO Nick Read said in February.

Huawei celebrated, lauding its own “exceptiona­l resilience,” when Canalys reported it had become the top-selling smartphone brand for the first time.

But those gains came from its home market. Sales outside China fell 27 percent from a year earlier.

Huawei has stepped up sales efforts in Russia, Turkey and other markets that are smaller but friendly with Beijing, said Ben Stanton of Canalys. Those are the “biggest opportunit­ies if the main bloc of Western countries turn away from them,” he said. ■

 ?? AP ?? A WOMAN wearing a mask to protect from the coronaviru­s walks with an umbrella as it rains outside a Huawei store in Beijing.
AP A WOMAN wearing a mask to protect from the coronaviru­s walks with an umbrella as it rains outside a Huawei store in Beijing.

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