China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Huawei looking to spur digital change

- By ZHOU MO sally@chinadaily­hk.com

Huawei Technologi­es Co, one of the top telecom equipment suppliers in China, is banking on its efforts in promoting digital transforma­tion for firms in the financial and other industries, to achieve a “much faster” year-on-year growth in its enterprise business this year.

Ma Yue, vice-president of Huawei Enterprise BG, said the company plans to set up nine OpenLabs across the world over the next two or three years to help global enterprise­s transform and innovate by using cloud computing, big data, internet of things and other technologi­es.

The company has launched 11 OpenLabs in a number of cities around the world, such as Munich, Paris and Bangkok, helping boost the digitaliza­tion in various iindustrie­s including finance, transporta­tion, energy and manufactur­ing in the regions.

Of all the industries, the financial industry is one that needs significan­t change as people are increasing­ly relying on their mobile phones to deal with money rather than going to banks.

“Digital transforma­tion has become a trend in the financial industry. Financial players are supposed to continuous­ly deepen their digital strategies and transforma­tion initiative­s to achieve platform-based strategic transforma­tion,” Ma said at the Huawei Global FSI Summit 2018 in Beijing on Wednesday.

Huawei’s enterprise business unit, which provides services to corporate customers in big data, cloud computing, artificial intelligen­ce and other ICT technologi­es, saw the fastest growth of revenue among the company’s three key businesses last year, rising by 35.1 percent year-on-year to 54.9 billion yuan ($8.7 billion), accounting for 9 percent of the company’s revenue.

The Shenzhen-based company’s two other major markets are the telecom carrier and consumer businesses.

“We expect corporate business to achieve much faster growth this year,” Liu Limin, president of the financial services sector at Huawei Enterprise BG, said.

Liu’s positive expectatio­n is partly based on the motivation among Chinese traditiona­l banks to embrace the change, as they are facing increasing pressure from the rapid growth of financial technology. Alipay and WeChat Pay, the mobile payment services brought by internet giants Alibaba and Tencent respective­ly, now take up more than 90 percent of the Chinese market share in mobile payment.

“This year, more mobile payments will be done in China than all the card payments in the rest of the world,” said Brett King, founder of US-based mobile financial service provider MovenBank and author of Bank 3.0. “If you want to look at leading this change in terms of how your phone is used as a bank account, China is maybe five or six years ahead of the United States with its technology today.”

Liu said China’s developmen­t in bank digitaliza­tion will also benefit the financial industry in other countries and Huawei will continue to pour in investment to help banks across the world to accomplish the transforma­tion.

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