Business Day

Covid headache for iPhone maker

• Foxconn is trying to resume full production after a coronaviru­s flare-up triggered a lockdown around its giant Zhengzhou factory

- Agency Staff

Hon Hai Precision Industry, the maker of most of the world’s iPhones, has warned that consumer electronic­s revenue will fall this quarter as it grapples with a Covid outbreak that walled off its main production base in central China.

The company, known also as Foxconn, reported earnings that missed estimates for the third quarter and said revenue growth would be flat for the current three-month period. Hon Hai is now trying to resume full production after a coronaviru­s flare-up in October triggered a lockdown last week around its biggest factory in Zhengzhou, severely curtailing the flow of goods and people it needs to sustain iPhone assembly.

Executives reiterated that they were working with the government to control the outbreak and get the plant back up and running.

Foxconn’s warning on revenue underscore­s the toll of China’s zero-Covid policy, a rigid system of sudden lockdowns and mass testing that’s depressed the world’s secondlarg­est economy. The curbs at the factory dubbed “iPhone City”

— a giant complex housing about 200,000 workers that cranks out an estimated four out of five of the world’s latest iPhones — dealt a blow to Apple and its supplier, which had struggled to stem an exodus of workers.

Harsh Covid restrictio­ns are worsening the fallout from weakening demand for consumer electronic­s worldwide. On Thursday, Pegatron, Apple’s other big iPhone-making partner, warned that sales would fall in 2022, led by a 15%-20% slide in notebook revenue in the fourth quarter.

In Japan, key chip equipment supplier Tokyo Electron slashed its forecast for operating profit this year by 24%, explaining that memory chip makers are pulling back on capital spending. The company said it was likely to also lose out because of US restrictio­ns on selling cuttingedg­e chip equipment to China.

Foxconn’s net income rose 5% to NT$38.8-billion ($1.22bn) in the September quarter, versus the NT$41bn average estimate, the device maker said on Thursday. Revenue climbed 24% to NT$1.75-trillion, exceeding the estimate of NT$1.52-trillion.

In the first half, the company surpassed profit expectatio­ns, thanks in part to effective management of supply during Covid lockdowns, when it secured support from local government­s to keep up a critical flow of components.

Foxconn has said it is managing the Zhengzhou lockdown in concert with the authoritie­s.

If it can get its production back on track soon and the Covid situation under control, sales should still take a hit in the first half of November before gradually recovering, analysts at Citigroup wrote in a note.

The disruption coincides with the US holiday shopping season as well as a sharp slowdown in demand for electronic­s worldwide. Apple warned on Sunday that it would ship fewer premium devices than anticipate­d because of the Zhengzhou lockdown.

The US company, which is grappling with tepid demand for less expensive iPhone 14s, expects to produce at least 3-million fewer iPhone 14 handsets than originally expected this year. The company and its suppliers now aim to make 87-million devices or fewer, compared with a target of 90-million units earlier, Bloomberg News reported this week.

Foxconn intends to raise capital spending in 2023 and most of that will go towards its already giant production base, chair Young Liu told analysts on Thursday.

In the longer term, Foxconn is also making a play to expand in electric vehicles (EVs). The world’s largest contract manufactur­er has targeted 5% market share in EVs in 2025, helped by its acquisitio­n of Lordstown Motors’ electric pickup trucks factory in Ohio.

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