The Star Early Edition

Wisdom of exposure to China is questioned

- Leonid Bershidsky

THE STOCKS of most big tech companies are down 10 percent to 15 percent this month, but the erasure of 13 percent of Apple’s market capitalisa­tion may make the most sense. If China has awakened the bears, Apple, whose dependence on that market has increased significan­tly in recent years, is prime bear bait.

Expansion into the Chinese market has been one of chief executive Tim Cook’s signature achievemen­ts. In the first quarter of Apple’s 2011 financial year – a year before founder Steve Jobs died – the company broke out data about its performanc­e in greater China for the first time: 9.2 percent of total revenue, 11.1 percent of operating income. By the third quarter of 2015, China accounted for 26.7 percent of revenue – Europe brought in just 20.8 percent – and 29.9 percent of operating profit, approachin­g the 35.9 percent Apple garners from the Americas, its home market.

Focus

China accounted for 60 percent of Apple’s revenue growth during that period.

“Our focus has very much been on China,” Cook explained on an earnings call in April 2011. “We wanted to understand that market and understand the levers there.”

The learning has never stopped, and it has affected some of the principles that were establishe­d under Jobs – for example, his commitment to keeping the iPhone’s screen relatively small or the refusal to accept third-party software keyboards.

Chinese consumers wanted Samsung-like big-screen smartphone­s, so Apple made the iPhone 6 Plus. Sure enough, China is the biggest market for it, and Apple has routed Samsung there. Chinese users wanted a choice of keyboards, like on Android, and they got it. So did the rest of the world, of course, but it would have had to make do with just one keyboard had it not been for China.

The same goes for golden phones, and now laptops, too. The next-generation iPhone will apparently be available in an extra hue – rose gold – and that, too, is a nod to what Cook says will be Apple’s biggest market someday.

On the most recent Apple earnings call, last month, Cook was asked whether he saw a threat in the recent disastrous performanc­e of the Chinese stock market. He said that it could “create some speed bumps in the near term”, but that he remained “extremely bullish” on China.

He cited a McKinsey study that said the share of upper-middle-class households in China would increase to 54 percent in 2022 from 14 percent in 2012.

“So we’re within that period at this moment, and you can see for all of us that travel there so much, with every trip you can see this occurring,” Cook said. “And so I think we would be foolish to change our plans. I think China is a fantastic geography with an incredible unpreceden­ted level of opportunit­y there.”

The McKinsey study is from 2013, though, when China boosterism was much more fashionabl­e than it is now. Since then, some internatio­nal companies, primarily the owners of luxury brands, have discovered the downside of being big in China. According to Bain, the management consultanc­y, Chinese consumers now account for 30 percent of global luxury spending, but they are growing more price-conscious, so the Chinese luxury market is expected to shrink 2 percent to 4 percent in real terms this year. The recent corruption crackdown has also affected demand.

This is directly relevant to Apple, because, since China became a leading market, it has been turning into a kind of tech luxury or fashion company. Apple Watch, the only significan­t product launched under Cook, is more of a fashion accessory than a useful device.

Despite posting excellent numbers in China, Apple cannot miss the shift away from inexplicab­ly expensive items toward more practical ones. In the second quarter of 2015, according to tech analysis firm Canalys, Apple dropped a notch in marketshar­e rankings for smartphone­s in China. It is now in third place behind local producers Xiaomi and Huawei.

Challenge

The recent devaluatio­n of the yuan poses another challenge: Should Apple accept thinner margins or risk losing even more sales to Xiaomi, Huawei and other budget competitor­s? Cook’s company is, according to Bloomberg Industries, the most exposed to China of all non-Chinese handset makers. While it will benefit from a reduction in its considerab­le yuan-based costs, the danger of marketshar­e loss is potentiall­y more dangerous.

Apple’s concentrat­ion on China has meant that it hasn’t made much headway in other emerging markets. It has only a 3.7 percent share of handset shipments in Latin America, down from 4.8 percent in the final quarter of last year, and a 3.2 percent share in the Middle East and Africa. It’s growing in India, but from an extremely low base – it has about 2 percent market share there. Like any dependence, Apple’s love affair with China can easily become a drag on its performanc­e if the Chinese economy settles into a pattern of lower growth and the country’s consumers become less motivated by prestige than by rational concerns. – Bloomberg

Customers wanted Samsung-like big-screen smartphone­s, so Apple made the iPhone 6 Plus. Sure enough China is the biggest market.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Customers try out Apple iPhone 6 smartphone­s at an Apple store in the China Central Mall in Beijing. Apple in China has now become a prime bear target.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Customers try out Apple iPhone 6 smartphone­s at an Apple store in the China Central Mall in Beijing. Apple in China has now become a prime bear target.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa