Bangkok Post

Google steps up its hardware push with $1.1bn HTC deal

- JESS MACY YU PARESH DAVE

TAIPEI/SAN FRANCISCO: Alphabet Inc’s Google said late Wednesday that it would pay $1.1 billion for the division at Taiwan’s HTC Corp that develops the US firm’s Pixel smartphone­s — its second major foray into phone hardware after an earlier costly failure.

The all-cash deal will see Google gain 2,000 HTC employees, roughly equivalent to one fifth of the Taiwanese firm’s total workforce.

It will also acquire a non-exclusive licence for HTC’s intellectu­al property and the two firms agreed to look at other areas of collaborat­ion in the future.

While Google is not acquiring any manufactur­ing assets, the transactio­n underscore­s a ramping up of its ambitions for Android smartphone­s at a time when consumer and media attention is largely focused on rival Apple Inc.

“Google has found it necessary to have its own hardware team to help bring innovation­s to Android devices, making them competitiv­e versus the iPhone series,” said Mia Huang, analyst at research firm TrendForce.

The move is part of a broader and still nascent push into hardware that saw Google hire Rick Osterloh, a former Motorola executive, to run its hardware division last year. It also comes ahead of new product launches on Oct 4 that are expected to include two Pixel phones and a Chromebook.

Pixel smartphone­s, only launched a year ago, have less than 1% market share globally with an estimated 2.8 million shipments, according to research firm Internatio­nal Data Corp (IDC).

Google will be aiming not to repeat mistakes made when it purchased Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion in 2012. It sold it off to China’s Lenovo Group Ltd for less than $3 billion two years later after Motorola failed to produce appealing products that could compete with iPhones.

This time around, however, the deal price tag is much smaller and the lack of manufactur­ing facilities also minimises risk.

Google’s strategy of licensing Android for free and profiting from embedded services such as search and maps has made Android the dominant mobile operating system with some 89% of the global market, according to IDC.

But it has long been frustrated by the emergence of many variations of Android and the inconsiste­nt experience that has produced. Pushing its own hardware will likely complicate its relationsh­ip with Android licensees, analysts say.

Some analysts also question the wisdom of the deal given HTC’s long decline. The Taiwanese firm once sold one in 10 smartphone­s globally but has seen market share dwindle sharply in the face of competitio­n from Apple, Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd and Chinese rivals.

“HTC is past its prime in terms of being a leading hardware design house, mainly because of how much it has had to scale back over the years because of declining revenues,” said Ryan Reith, an analyst at IDC.

“Unless Google really wants to control hardware for its other businesses like Home and Chromebook­s in addition to smartphone­s, then I don’t see this as being a bet that pays off.”

For HTC, the deal will allow it to concentrat­e more on its virtual reality headsets while also reducing developmen­t costs.

“This will be a sizeable reduction in our R&D expenses. Overall it should be in the ballpark of a 30-40% reduction in operating expenses,” HTC chief financial officer Peter Shen told a news conference in Taipei.

The Taiwanese firm will continue to run its remaining smartphone business but the sharp downsizing of its mainstay operations has cast some doubt over its longer term future.

“HTC can design and produce innovative products but it lacks the deep pockets of the likes of Samsung for marketing promotions and saturation advertisin­g,” said Jake Saunders, an analyst at ABI Research in Singapore.

“Competitor­s in the form of Huawei, Oppo, Xiaomi and ZTE are snapping at HTC’s heels.”

HTC’s worldwide smartphone market share declined to 0.9% last year from a peak of 8.8% in 2011, according to IDC.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The Google logo is seen on a smartphone in front of a HTC logo in this illustrati­on taken yesterday.
REUTERS The Google logo is seen on a smartphone in front of a HTC logo in this illustrati­on taken yesterday.

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