Sunday Tribune

Apple draws the short end of the stick

In price and value, Chinese phone makers are outpacing iphones in much of the rest of the world, but not in the US

- RAYMOND ZHONG | The New York Times News Service

TO MOST Western consumers, the names are unfamiliar, maybe a little hard to pronounce: Huawei, Xiaomi, Oppo, Vivo.

They are China’s biggest smartphone brands. Around the world – although not in the US – they are making the handset business brutally competitiv­e. This week, after Apple warned of disappoint­ing iphone sales in China, industry observers said devices from the Chinese brands were a major culprit.

As the phone market in China reaches saturation and sales shrink, the country’s hardware makers are pushing hard and increasing­ly winning fans, in places like France, Germany, India and Southeast Asia, where consumers find that the phones can do just about everything an iphone can do at a fraction of the cost.

Apple sits comfortabl­y atop the market in many countries, including China, for the highest-end handsets. But companies like Huawei have started to do elsewhere what they have done in China, competing with the iphone on experience and value and luring customers with price comparison­s that make them rethink buying Apple’s signature product.

The cost difference is notable: In China, an iphone XR starts at around $950 (R13 247), while Huawei’s topend handsets start at about $600, and Xiaomi’s comparable models start at even less. The iphone XS starts at around $1 250.

Companies like Huawei and Oppo have made improvemen­ts in features and overall quality that are enticing many wealthy Chinese people, said Mo Jia, an analyst in Shanghai for the technology research firm Canalys.

Chinese brands’ aggressive marketing and sales campaigns in Europe indicate that the companies believe consumers there who have traditiona­lly used iphones will do the same thing.

“Maybe it won’t happen this year or next year,” Jia said. “But Huawei is going in that direction.”

In its pursuit of the European market, Huawei, which has its headquarte­rs in Shenzhen and is now the world’s No 2 seller of smartphone­s, has gone far beyond the phone store. Huawei has sponsored summer concerts in Greece, teamed up with Lithuania’s basketball federation and backed a “China Festival” in Cologne, Germany. Vivo sponsored last year’s World Cup in Russia.

Xiaomi, which is based in Beijing and was founded in 2010, seemingly came out of nowhere to become the No 4 mobile brand in Europe early last year, according to Canalys. The gadget maker has also become the top seller of phones in India, in part by opening hundreds of stores in rural areas.

Chinese phone makers have not made similar inroads in the US. The US government has worked for years to stymie the sale of Huawei’s smartphone­s and telecom-network equipment, after a congressio­nal inquiry in 2012 deemed Huawei a potential vehicle for cyberspyin­g by the Chinese government. The Trump administra­tion has urged Western allies to do the same.

Security concerns have not dissuaded some buyers across the Atlantic. Giannis Vassilopou­los, a college student in Athens, said he had been bombarded by Huawei ads during his recent travels around Europe. He said he had bought a Huawei phone because the brand felt more familiar, more European even.

Apple still has a hold on consumers in many places. Announcing the sales slump in China this week, the company’s chief executive, Tim Cook, said Apple expected to set revenue records in wealthier countries like Germany, Italy, the Netherland­s, South Korea and Spain and in some emerging markets like Malaysia, Mexico, Poland and Vietnam.

In China, though, Apple’s market share has been declining, and the company is clinging to the No 5 spot in smartphone shipments, according to the market research firm Counterpoi­nt. An Apple spokespers­on declined to comment.

China became the world’s largest smartphone market over the past decade as rising incomes coincided with an explosion in mobile technology.

People in China rely on handsets in an all-encompassi­ng way, using them to rent bikes, sign into gyms and pay restaurant bills. The market is increasing­ly saturated, and there are fewer people in China who do not have an advanced device.

But there are also new economic reasons to buy locally made goods: consumers who are replacing or looking to upgrade are dialling back in light of China’s slowdown.

Today mainland China’s top smartphone seller is Huawei, whose handset line includes midrange devices and higher-end models with all the latest features. Vivo and Oppo, brands owned by the same Chinese parent company, are next. Then comes Xiaomi, whose phones, smart home devices and even sneakers command a passionate fan base. Samsung of South Korea, which sells more smartphone­s globally than any other brand, has only around 1 percent of the market in China.

Feng Yin, a 32-year-old engineer, has an iphone now, but he is considerin­g switching to a Huawei device.

“In the past few years, the technology in Apple’s phones has not had any big breakthrou­ghs, while the technology in domestic phones has gotten better and better,” he said, while browsing in a Huawei store in Shanghai on Friday. “The difference is getting smaller.”

On Friday, Xian Longfei, a restaurant chef, and a friend were at an Oppo store in Shanghai. When it comes to cellphone brands, Xian, 35, has tried many: Nokia, Motorola, Samsung and three iphone models. He switched to an Oppo a few months ago.

He acknowledg­es Apple’s devices still seem better. But many of his friends in Shanghai and people in his home town are Oppo users. And the price, around $400 on sale, was hard to beat.

Another factor working against Apple in China is the dominance of Wechat, a messaging, social media and payments app used by more than 1billion people. It works on Google’s Android operating system as well as Apple’s, making a phone’s software less of a differenti­ating factor.

“Why would people pay such a high price for an iphone,” asked Kiranjeet Kaur, an analyst for the industry research firm IDC, “if, from a hardware perspectiv­e, there isn’t much of an upgrade from Huawei and, from a platform perspectiv­e, there’s nothing to lock people in?

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