Bangkok Post

Huawei’s profit growth flat

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Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd’s earnings grew at their slowest pace in five years, as China’s biggest maker of telecommun­ications gear sank money into research and a marketing blitz to gain ground on Apple Inc and Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd in smartphone­s.

Huawei, founded by former army engineer Ren Zhengfei three decades ago, has emerged as one of China’s most recognizab­le consumer brands.

A relatively new entrant in mobile devices, it’s rapidly grabbed market share from Apple and Samsung with premium phones and is now ranked third globally. But that expansion comes at a cost, as the company boosts spending to keep up.

Its main business of networking equipment is also slowing as phone carriers rein in network rollouts and prepare for the advent of faster 5G standards. And smartphone competitio­n at home from the likes of Oppo is intensifyi­ng.

Net income inched 0.4% higher to 37.1 billion yuan ($5.4 billion) in 2016, the Shenzhen, China-based company said yesterday. That was its slowest pace of growth since a profit decline in 2011.

Its net margin dipped to 7.1%, from about 9.3% the previous year.

“Going forward, that level of profitabil­ity is appropriat­e,” said Eric Xu, the current rotating chief executive.

Huawei said that it spent 14.6% of its 2016 revenue on R&D and would set aside $10 billion to $20 billion annually for that purpose as it ramps up research into everything from artificial intelligen­ce and wireless technology to cloud computing.

But it’s also begun keeping a closer eye on the bottom line.

Xu pledged in December to cut extravagan­t marketing events and warned against “blind optimism and rhetoric.”

“Mounting expenses will damage efficiency and profitabil­ity,’’ he said in a memo to staff.

The company blamed a rapidly expanding consumer business for weighing on margins.

Revenue grew 32% to 521.6 billion yuan, said Huawei, a closely-held company that discloses only basic finances.

That was a tad ahead of its own expectatio­ns. But the consumer division outstrippe­d that pace, growing revenue 44% to 179.8 billion yuan by shipping 139 million smartphone­s in 2016.

Huawei has become less dependent on its traditiona­l networking business as the company attempts to grow sales from cloud computing and smartphone­s.

About 56% of its sales came from the telecoms-carrier business last year, down from about 60% in 2015 and about two-thirds in 2014, according to previous reports.

It’s declared its intention of becoming the world’s largest smartphone player within half a decade and Huawei is said to be aiming for $33 billion in 2017 revenue for its consumer electronic­s business, which include smartphone­s, tablets and wearables.

But that business is under assault at home. It lost its top position in China’s smartphone market last year to Guangdong Oppo Electronic­s Co, which attacked rural areas and lower-tier cities. And Vivo ranked just behind Huawei domestical­ly in the December quarter, according to IDC.

While Huawei has voiced ambitions to expand abroad, it remains heavily reliant on its home market. China contribute­d 45% or 236.5 billion yuan of revenue last year compared with 42% in 2015.

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