The Chinese government on July 12 announced it had given Xiaomi a production license to independently assemble electric vehicles, meaning the smartphone maker has cleared the official hurdles required to scale up its production independently, without needing its traditional car manufacturer ally BAIC.
Why it matters: The green light from Chinese regulators will pave the way for a smooth production ramp-up for Xiaomi, which has raised its delivery target to 120,000 from 72,000 units for this year and hopes to reach a wider customer group with upcoming models.
Details: Xiaomi is now on the list of “all-electric passenger car manufacturers,” according to the registration filings released for public review by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) on July 12 (our translation).
Context: Xiaomi reached the 10,000-unit milestone in June, its third delivery month, bringing the year-to-date delivery volume of its answer to Tesla’s Model 3 to nearly 26,000 units.
READ MORE: “China’s Apple” Xiaomi takes aim at Tesla with debut EV launch, as millions watch online
]]>Sales of Chinese electric vehicle makers Li Auto and Huawei-backed Aito dropped sharply in April as rivals Zeekr and NIO managed to post major improvements, in the latest indication of how competition in the country could be impacted by price cuts and new model launches.
Why it matters: The latest sales figures in April showed the world’s largest EV market is slowly recovering from a sales slump due to an economic downturn and inclement weather early this year. Some potential EV buyers are still waiting on the sidelines for possible stimulus measures and for new cars shown at this year’s Beijing Auto Show to make it to market, experts say.
READ MORE: Global carmakers take on Chinese giants in EV showdown at Beijing Auto Show 2024
Details: GAC’s Aion, Li Auto, and Huawei-backed Aito – which are among the biggest Chinese EV makers – all reported double-digit declines in EV deliveries in April from a month earlier. Huawei saw sales of Aito-branded EVs fall 21% last month, with monthly deliveries of the redesigned M7 falling to 10,896 units from its peak of nearly 30,000 units. Aion and Li Auto delivered 28,113 and 25,787 EVs in April, 13.6% and 11% fewer than a month earlier, respectively.
Context: China’s new energy vehicle sales in April are expected to be on par with March at roughly 720,000 units, partly because wait-and-see sentiment has grown among Chinese customers, the China Passenger Car Association said in an April 25 post.
READ MORE: Explainer: How a new round of price cuts are reshaping China’s EV market
]]>Global carmakers from Volkswagen to Toyota are introducing new models at the Beijing Auto Show 2024 with the help of Chinese tech companies in an effort to defend market share amid a major shift to electric vehicles led by local car giants.
The biannual trade event, which on Thursday witnessed a return to pre-pandemic attendance levels after a brief pause in 2022, also represents another landmark moment for the Chinese EV sector where domestic players are once again on the offensive with an array of new models. A similar event in Shanghai a year ago reportedly prompted the industry’s legacy players to either increase their efforts or rethink their brands in order to adapt to the changes.
Below, TechNode provides a summary of some of the biggest releases from both international and Chinese automakers, including BYD, GAC, Geely, Honda, Toyota, and Volkswagen. There are also some notable updates from younger players such as Xiaomi, NIO, and Xpeng, which might give a clue as to where the most competitive EV market in the world is heading.
China’s biggest EV maker on Thursday unveiled a higher-end variant of its Qin vehicle, the top-selling compact sedan in the country last year. The new car is scheduled for launch in the second quarter with an expected price tag of RMB 120,000 ($16,560). The Qin L measures 4.8 meters in length and spans a 2,790-millimeter-long wheelbase, placing it between the Qin Plus and the Han in terms of size. It features the company’s next-generation plug-in hybrid platform DM-i 5.0, which could suggest an improvement in range and fuel efficiency. The company also introduced the Seal 06, a plug-in hybrid EV under the Ocean lineup which is about the same size as the Qin L but loaded with more stylish design language to attract younger customers.
Aion, the third best-selling EV brand in China last year after BYD and Tesla, showcased its first global model, replete with modern technologies and angular styling, as its state-owned parent beefs up its strategy to woo customers worldwide. GAC said its all-new Aion V, scheduled for launch in July, will maintain a driving range of over 750 kilometers (466 miles) even when the mercury dips to -30 degrees Celsius, and offers a large interior space comparable to the likes of the BMW X5. The all-electric sports utility vehicle, which incorporates traditional Chinese dragons into its design, can navigate varied urban environments worldwide with features such as lane switching by utilizing advanced artificial intelligence algorithms to process sensor data instead of high-precision maps, the company said.
Volvo’s parent showed its ambition to become a disruptive force in the global automotive industry with the debut of what it described as the world’s first production model with two sliding doors and front swivel seats. Geely has taken a radical approach to how EVs are put together, giving the 4.7 meter-long Zeekr Mix an extended wheelbase of three meters achieved through a more compact electric motor, shorter front overhangs, and repositioning of the air conditioning system, among other components. This, along with the front seats that can rotate 270 degrees, would allow kids to play or families to dine together in a 1.5 square meter interior flat space. The five-seater multi-purpose vehicle, offering a 1.5 meter width opening area for passengers, targets three-generation Chinese families, especially those with elders and pregnant mothers.
Japan’s Honda on Thursday began selling its second all-electric model with time-limited discounts in China in the company’s latest effort to boost sales. The move comes after entrenched rivals such as BYD and Tesla recently rolled out more price cuts amid slowing growth. The e:NP2 SUV has a driving range of 545 km at a price tag of RMB 159,800, providing buyers with a RMB 30,000 reduction compared to its original plan, according to Li Jin, a deputy general manager of Honda’s China joint venture with GAC. Honda also debuted the Ye, a new series of all-electrics with technologies sourced from Huawei and iFlyTek among other Chinese tech firms, as part of its plan to sell only EVs in China by 2035.
Toyota said on Thursday it will integrate lidar sensors into its two upcoming models under the “Beyond Zero” (bZ) all-electric series, as the world’s top-selling automaker looks to provide consumers with the same level of assisted driving technology as Huawei and Xiaomi. The bZ3x and the bZ3c compact crossovers will be able to automatically change lanes, and enter and exit Chinese highways when they go on sale within the next 12 months. Toyota also announced it is exploring the uses of generative AI in collaboration with Tencent, as Chinese consumers expect their future vehicles to be more capable and personalized. This follows reports that the Japanese giant is using Huawei components to enable autonomous driving functions on its China-made EVs.
Germany’s biggest carmaker participated in Auto Beijing 2024 with major global debuts including the ID.Code concept – which offers a glimpse into its upcoming, China-specific all-electric lineup ID.UX – as well as the Audi Q6L e-tron, the first production model based on its PPE electric platform. The coupe-styled ID.Code will be equipped for highly autonomous driving and come with a sophisticated AI assistant with contributions from local designers, as Volkswagen plans to introduce the first model under the new series later this year. In addition to partnerships with Xpeng and Horizon Robotics, the automaker confirmed it is working with Chinese tech giants including DJI, as its latest Tiguan L SUV now features an advanced driver assistance system (ADAS) sourced from the drone maker.
Xiaomi was the center of attention on Thursday when the Chinese smartphone giant said it had secured 75,723 reservations with non-refundable deposits for the SU7, its first EV, with a competitive price range between RMB 215,900 and RMB 299,900. Chief executive Lei Jun expects monthly delivery to exceed 10,000 units in June and the company is set to reach a milestone with 100,000 EV deliveries by this year, which would be a record speed for any Chinese EV brand. The 55-year-old entrepreneur is an icon in the Chinese tech and auto industries, with his visits to rivals’ booths becoming one of the hottest topics at this year’s Beijing Auto show.
Xpeng Motors could take on its major frenemy with the mainstream brand MONA, short for ‘Made of New AI,’ CEO He Xiaopeng told reporters during a press conference.
Meanwhile, one of NIO‘s new affordable brands, called ONVO, is scheduled for launch in the second quarter of this year. The luxury EV maker on Thursday launched a redesigned version of its ET7 sedan with a starting price of RMB 428,000, which is RMB 20,000 lower than its original version launched three years ago.
READ MORE: Huawei, Xiaomi, and Geely’s new EVs have details leaked on Chinese government site
]]>Major Chinese automakers, including Geely and Changan, have strategically introduced big discounts to their car prices or new variants of existing models despite posting a pickup in March deliveries, in a defensive move after Xiaomi’s first car reached nearly 90,000 pre-orders in just 24 hours.
Xiaomi’s smash hit: The initial success of Xiaomi’s first EV, rolled out on March 28 with a lower-than-expected price tag, is having a knock-on effect on most other automakers which are being forced to take immediate action in order to hold on to their market shares.
March sales, discounts: Sales of Geely’s new energy vehicles (NEVs) rose 65% year-on-year and 34% month-on-month to 44,791 units in March, of which roughly 13,000 were Zeekr-branded battery EVs, partly driven by the strong sales of its refreshed 001 sports wagons, delivery of which began on March 1.
READ MORE: Explainer: How a new round of price cuts are reshaping China’s EV market
Context: The March sales figures – which showed a rebound from the annual Chinese New Year holiday slump – also indicated a stronger growth momentum for PHEVs than BEVs with a growing number of carmakers pivoting to more affordable PHEVs as they look to expand NEV sales in China’s vast majority of underdeveloped regions.
Hundreds of people flocked to a Xiaomi store in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou in the late hours of Thursday evening to be among the first to take a look at what many deem to be the electronics brand’s more affordable alternative to a Porsche, as the brand announced a lower than expected starting price for its debut electric vehicle. That’s what TechNode observed during a livestream broadcast by a Chinese electric car blogger on social media app WeChat that attracted more than 200,000 viewers within an hour.
Xiaomi has already enjoyed a debut win after securing a record 50,000 pre-orders in just a few minutes following its SU7 EV launch event. The official livestream racked up nearly 43 million views on microblogging platform Weibo, underscoring the overwhelming interest among tech-savvy Chinese consumers in the company’s first car. Those making a reservation were asked to pay a RMB 5,000 ($692) deposit as part of the process, with the tech giant expressing its thanks to customers who did so in a brief statement on the microblogging platform Weibo (in Chinese).
The all-electric sports sedan is selling at a lower than expected starting price of RMB 215,900 ($29,881), roughly $4,100 cheaper than the popular Tesla Model 3, while touting better performance from driving range to acceleration. The dual-motor all-wheel drive version competes with the Porsche Taycan with a top speed of 265 kilometers (165 miles) per hour at a price tag of only RMB 299,900.
Xiaomi’s car launch contrasts markedly with Apple’s surprise retreat from the EV landscape, after the iPhone maker reportedly scrapped its decade-long effort to make a car recently. “We will provide every user, including those with Apple devices, a smart and connected life experience everywhere, creating seamless integration in their homes, cars, and beyond,” Xiaomi chief executive Lei Jun said during the press conference (our translation).
Lei, the 55-year-old serial entrepreneur dubbed “China’s Steve Jobs”, tried to lure users away from traditional carmakers during the two-hour event by showcasing how Xiaomi’s ecosystem would provide universal connection and integration between different devices, including phones, cars, and gadgets at home.
Xiaomi essentially promised potential buyers that their devices would be all tied together with a click, swipe, or a simple voice command. The car’s air conditioning will cool the interior down on a hot summer’s day once the owner tells a home speaker what temperature they want before even leaving the house, according to one example given. In another, the car’s dashboard could become a centralized command station for home accessories which will be activated as the driver approaches home.
Although rival Huawei has touted similar efforts with its EV partners, Xiaomi claimed last November that more than 655 million devices have been connected to its IoT (Internet of Things) platform, from televisions to fitness bands, making it the biggest network of its kind worldwide. “This is a trump card from Xiaomi,” said Lei when discussing the linking of the brand’s new EV with its IoT network.
Meanwhile, Lei mentioned Xiaomi’s plans to be “among the top-tier players” in autonomous driving, a field where Tesla already stands out as a pioneer globally and Huawei is establishing its name at home. The company said its EVs are already capable of traveling more than 300 km on average autonomously on Chinese highways before human drivers take over and will be able to complete most trips by themselves on urban streets across China by August.
Xiaomi is moving towards two distinct approaches by working on both a camera-based computer vision system and another advanced driver assistance system (ADAS) that relies on more sensors including lidar. The company said it will exclusively employ Nvidia’s cutting-edge chips for both systems and bring the software development completely in-house to ensure timely over-the-air updates across all its car variants.
“In China, Tesla vehicles will not be as good as the SU7 when it comes to intelligent driving capabilities,” said Lei, adding that customers who placed their orders before the end of this year will get the software free of charge. Tesla currently charges Chinese buyers RMB 64,000 for future access to its full self-driving (FSD) package, despite it remaining unavailable in the country. Still, it is faced with competitors from BYD to Geely which also look to offer customers highly automated features with their premium EVs.
READ MORE: Key takeaways from Xiaomi’s EV pre-launch: A top offering facing a tough test
]]>Details of new electric vehicle models from Chinese auto and tech majors including Huawei, Xiaomi, and Geely have been leaked online via an official regulatory process. Some are expected to make their debut at the upcoming Beijing Motor Show next month, positioned to compete with models from dominant rivals such as BYD and Tesla, and potentially stirring up a new price war in the world’s biggest auto market.
The companies expect the upcoming models, now making a splash online, to become bestselling or otherwise strategically important cars for their brands. Below are highlights from the registration filings released for public review by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) on Tuesday, giving critical details of the models ahead of their official launches.
The S9 will be the first model under the new premium Stelato brand launched in partnership between Huawei and China’s BAIC and the largest sedan model of all Huawei-enabled EVs to date. The car measures 5.1 meters in length and 1.5 meters in height with a wheelbase of nearly 3.1 meters, offering passengers a spacious and comfortable interior in an effort to draw in affluent Chinese consumers.
The all-electric executive sedan will be available in single and dual-motor variants producing 308 and 524 horsepower respectively, and will include innovative elements such as a camera-based digital rear-view mirror system as an optional add-on, according to the filings. Analysts expect the car to be launched in June for between RMB 300,000 and RMB 500,000 ($41,730-$69,550). Shares in partner BAIC Bluepark surged 32% on the mainland Chinese stock market on the news over the week.
China’s Geely is raising its bet on the small but growing segment of multi-purpose vehicles with its upcoming roll-out of the Zeek Mix, an all-electric five-seater van, after the launch of its larger and more business-oriented Zeekr 009 nearly two years ago. The pictures published by MIIT show a mid-size MPV with a rounded exterior and low center of gravity as well as an optionalLIDAR unit mounted on the car’s roof for automated driving.
It is slightly shorter than the Zeekr 007 sedan at nearly 4.7 meters in length, likely making it easier to maneuver and attractive to parents, while offering a larger interior with a 3,008-millimeter-long wheelbase. The single-motor car has a 422-horsepower electric powertrain – higher than the plug-in hybrid Denza D9 from BYD, currently a top-seller in the market, but less powerful than bigger offerings such as the Xpeng X9 and the Li Auto Mega.
Xiaomi on Wednesday received Chinese government approval for a new variant of its first EV, the long-anticipated SU7, equipped with lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries sourced from CATL and roughly 110 kilograms heavier than the one powered by BYD’s iron-based batteries. Speculation has circulated that the new power option could be CATL’s Shenxing batteries, which have boasted of a high energy density for a longer driving range and an 800-volt electrical system for faster charging compared with existing offerings.
China’s industry regulator had previously uncovered details about another entry-level SU7 and the more premium SU7 Pro/Max, which the company claimed could accelerate from 0 to 100 km/h (62 mph) in 2.78 seconds and would be more aerodynamic than rivals’ offerings including Tesla’s Model S. Chief executive Lei Jun said on Friday that the smartphone maker will begin deliveries immediately on March 28, when pricing of the sports sedan will be finally announced.
READ MORE: Explainer: How a new round of price cuts are reshaping China’s EV market
]]>Huawei and Dongfeng Motor, a Chinese manufacturing partner of Stellantis, are in an ongoing collaboration to develop smart electric vehicles, the companies have announced. This adds to a string of such deals by technology giant Huawei as it accelerates its entry into the auto market.
The partnership could help Voyah, a subsidiary of state-owned automaker Dongfeng, increase sales and expand its presence in the red-hot EV market where a wave of consolidation and reshuffling is underway, according to David Zhang, a visiting professor at Huanghe Science and Technology University.
Why it matters: The alliance is the latest example of Huawei’s multifold endeavor to expand into EVs. It has pushed two initiatives to enhance cooperation with carmakers in particular.
Details: According to Zhang, Huawei will adopt the HI approach with Dongfeng, mainly selling the carmaker components and software, and will probably not go into as much depth as it did with Seres.
Context: Huawei has been working on the spin-off of its automotive business unit for several months. The company in November announced plans to establish a joint venture with Changan, stating that other existing partners such as Seres have been invited to invest in the new entity.
Xiaomi held its most significant media event of the year in Beijing on Thursday: the debut of its first electric car. With a size comparable to the BMW 5 Series and a shape similar to the Porsche Taycan, the four-door sedan boasts some of the Chinese car market’s highest specifications, as cut-throat competition from maturing rivals rises.
The sleek, gadget-full all-electric sedan is aiming to become a top choice for China’s increasingly tech-savvy consumers, and certainly aroused widespread curiosity judging by the more than 46 million people who logged on for the three-hour-long unveiling on the country’s Twitter-like site Weibo. Yet from journalists and insiders alike, the reaction was mixed.
From the event, TechNode has selected some of the car’s highlights.
The high-performance SU7 can sprint from 0 to 100 km/h (62 mph) in 2.78 seconds, as it climbs to a top speed of 265 km/h. It is claimed to be the world’s most aerodynamic production car with a drag coefficient (Cd) of 0.195. By comparison, the Taycan Turo can hit 260 km/h and Tesla’s Model S has a Cd of 0.208. It also comes just a month after rival Huawei launched the Luxeed S7 sedan at 0.203Cd.
Xiaomi said it uses two 9,100-ton mega casting press machines to produce the front and rear underbody pieces, giving the car a torsional stiffness of 51,000 Nm/degree, nearly twice the number of the Ford F-150 Raptor and higher than any other car on the road. The technology, first adopted by Tesla, has since been embraced by Chinese EV makers from Geely-affiliated Zeekr to Huawei-backed Aito.
Xiaomi’s chief executive Lei Jun presented aspects of the company’s self-driving initiative for public viewing, highlighting that the premium version of the SU7 will incorporate two Nvidia Drive Orin processing chips plus a laser sensor unit on the car’s roof to carry out certain partially autonomous driving functions. Xiaomi also showed a short video of the car drawing into a tight garage space autonomously.
The Chinese tech company has set a goal for its advanced driver assistance software to be available to drivers in 100 major Chinese cities by the end of the next year, according to Lei. Huawei and Xpeng Motors are for now the leaders of this booming market, with established carmakers from BYD to Great Wall Motor trying to catch up.
The SU7 will be the latest Chinese car model powered by Qualcomm’s smart cockpit computing platform SA8295, after the Zeekr 001 FR and its sibling Jiyue 01, and its infotainment system will turn on in just 1.5 seconds. It is also integrated seamlessly into the Xiaomi ecosystem with the adoption of the company’s self-developed operating system, the HyperOS, which takes only 30 minutes or so to carry out important updates, according to the company.
CEO Lei said the SU7 would create the same smooth experience that anybody with a Mi Phone is used to, as various apps are pushed from their phones to a 16.1-inch in-car dashboard once they sit in the car. Other devices, from tablets to home appliances, also seamlessly work with the vehicle, an integration trend led by auto and tech majors such as Huawei, Geely, and NIO.
Xiaomi will have to pick an appropriate price tag, given it starts with a somewhat broad, unclear positioning, said You Xi, a seasoned economic and financial writer and co-founder of Chinese online media platform Communication Planet. “It remains challenging for the company to extend its brand into EVs,” You added, citing similar offerings from multiple competitors among his reasons (our translation).
The smartphone giant plans to introduce two variants of the SU7 to “contemporary elites with taste in lifestyle and technology” in China over the next few months, said Lei. Some experts have predicted the premium version of the car, with an estimated driving range of 800 kilometers (497 miles), could cost consumers at least RMB 300,000 ($41,124).
]]>Huawei is doubling down on electric vehicles with plans to run as many as 800 showrooms in China next year dedicated to the joint car brands that it has launched with manufacturing partners, aiming to become a more visible player in the world’s biggest auto market.
Why it matters: The new shops, expected to present a broader portfolio with larger spaces compared to Huawei’s current policy of showcasing vehicles in its regular appliance stores, will allow Huawei to display models and arrange test drives for more potential buyers. They will also be part of a branding overhaul to enhance Huawei’s brand image as a major car tech company.
Details: In what could be the tech giant’s fastest period of growth in its history, Huawei is planning to operate 800 car showrooms next year and increase that number to 1,000 in 2025, people familiar with the matter told Chinese media outlet 36Kr.
Context: Sources added that a retail and distribution network of 800 shops next year will be comparable to that of Huawei’s major rival Li Auto, which operates nearly 400 direct-sales stores and 320 maintenance centers as of November.
Xiaomi said on Tuesday that it had sacked three employees for “spreading rumors” about plans for its electric vehicle business, as the company also said it was planning legal action over photos of its first car model leaked online by two media outlets. For months, multiple reports have circulated on Chinese social media featuring unauthorized confidential information about the smartphone maker’s EV business.
Why it matters: The news comes as Xiaomi, known for its low-cost pricing advantage in the smartphone market, has captured growing attention from Chinese netizens due to speculation of an imminent launch of its inaugural EV model, potentially heightening competition in the already low-margin sector.
Details: The three employees were found by the company to have spread inaccurate information without permission during conferences hosted by brokerages and investment firms, severely misleading the markets and disrupting operations at Xiaomi’s EV division, the company said in a post on the Chinese Twitter-like platform Weibo.
Context: A research note recently circulated on the Chinese internet and obtained by financial news agency Jiemian published what it said was “key information” regarding Xiaomi’s first EV, naming some of the suppliers for components such as the head-up display.
On Tuesday, Oppo smartphone subsidiary OnePlus unveiled its flagship series OnePlus 12 just in time to celebrate the brand’s tenth anniversary on Dec. 16. To showcase the specifications of the new device, OnePlus China’s CEO Li Jie spent a full three hours describing it in detail at the launch event, making regular comparisons to Xiaomi’s 14 Pro throughout.
Why it matters: The launch of OnePlus’ new flagship is a direct challenge to Xiaomi and its subsidiary Redmi, as the Oppo sub-brand looks to focus on high-quality smartphones with cutting-edge features offered at competitive prices.
Details: At the launch event, OnePlus repeatedly compared the OnePlus 12’s software and hardware capabilities with those of the Xiaomi 14 Pro, emphasizing its starting price of RMB 4,299 ($606), compared to the latter’s RMB 4,999 ($705).
Context: In June 2021, OnePlus announced it had merged teams with Oppo, its parent company, to streamline its operations.
Huawei is spinning off its automotive business unit, enabling Changan Automobile and other manufacturing partners to invest, in a move aimed at turning the loss-making car division into a profitable operation amid fierce competition.
Why it matters: The reorganization is a rare move for Huawei – a company under 100% ownership of founder Ren Zhengfei and its staff since 2003, according to its official website – as the Chinese telecommunication giant puts a date of 2025 on its target of profitability for its as-yet loss-making auto business.
Details: The new joint venture will focus on areas already covered by Huawei’s Intelligent Automotive Solution (IAS) business unit, including the development of intelligent driving software, digital cockpit systems, and digital platforms, among others, according to a regulatory filing published by Shenzhen-listed Changan dated on Monday.
Context: Huawei, state-owned Changan and Chinese battery maker CATL announced a partnership to establish EV brand Avatr back in late 2020. The companies have sold roughly 20,000 units of the Avatr 11 battery electric crossover since delivery began last December, launching their second premium model with a starting price of RMB 300,800 ($41,240) earlier this month.
READ MORE: Xpeng and Huawei-backed EV maker set new delivery records as demand grows for self-driving tech
]]>Images of what could be Xiaomi’s first electric vehicle model have leaked online ahead of the car’s expected launch next year. The photos from the Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology show a large sedan with styling similar to the Porsche Taycan, adorned with a Xiaomi logo.
Why it matters: Automakers are required by Chinese regulators to apply for registration before officially selling vehicles in the country, and the government ministry’s post indicates that the debut of the first Xiaomi car is approaching.
Details: The Xiaomi SU7 is around five meters long and spans a 3,000-millimeter-long wheelbase, making it bigger than many mid-size sedans such as Tesla’s Model 3. It has a total mass of 2,430 kg and a curb weight of 1,980 kg, based on the registration details revealed by the MIIT on Wednesday.
Context: Xiaomi and Huawei are among the Chinese technology giants with the potential to become major players in the EV space with advanced intelligent capabilities and a broad sales network, which remain difficult for many carmakers to replicate, Morgan Stanley analyst Tim Hsiao commented on an earnings call held by Xpeng Motors on Wednesday.
READ MORE: Five things to know about Xiaomi’s new electric car company
]]>Huawei on Thursday revealed its first electric sedan under the new Luxeed marque in collaboration with automaker Chery, saying it will compete with Tesla and Mercedes Benz’s premium offerings at a price comparable to the cheapest models of its international rivals.
“After some deliberation, we will make all versions of the Luxeed S7 available for purchase despite making a loss,” Richard Yu, the chief executive of Huawei’s consumer business group, told the media during a press conference in Shenzhen (our translation). This will allow more customers to try Huawei’s smart vehicle technology at an affordable price, said Yu.
The aggressive pricing strategy unveiled at the Luxeed S7’s launch marks the latest push by the Chinese technology giant to crack the world’s biggest and most competitive electric vehicle market. Huawei hopes it will be a new revenue source to offset the negative impact of US restrictions on its smartphone business.
Here’s what we know about the newly-launched Luxeed S7 sedan:
Pricing: The sedan comes at a minimum price of RMB 258,000 ($35,381), RMB 2,000 lower than Tesla’s entry-level Model 3 in China. Pre-sale started on Thursday and the official launch is scheduled for Nov. 28.
Automated driving: The Huawei-Chery electric sedan is the first model to use the tech giant’s latest proprietary Harmony operating system. Its autonomous valet parking feature enables the car to park itself in lots and then return to a designated spot using a remote-control assisted function.
The premium versions of the Luxeed S7 will include Huawei’s laser sensor units and its Advanced Driving System (ADS) that uses deep learning networks and computer vision algorithms, including one called the General Obstacle Detection network, for navigating its surroundings.
Huawei has claimed its partially autonomous driving technology will be accessible on major city roads across China by the end of the year, potentially ahead of rivals including Xpeng Motors.
Main specs: Yu specifically identified Tesla’s Model S as Huawei’s major competitor, claiming that Huawei and Chery’s full-size luxury sedan outperformed its rival’s in terms of range, energy efficiency, and luxury.
The top-end Luxeed S7 will have a driving range of more than 800 kilometers (497 miles) and be capable of driving another 400 km on 15 minutes of supercharging using Huawei’s facilities. By comparison, the dual-motor Tesla Model S has a 715 km range and can add 347 km in 15 minutes.
The car also impresses with high energy efficiency, consuming an estimated 12.4 kWh per 100 km, compared with 13.2 kWh and 17.5 kWh achieved by the rear-drive Model 3 and the dual-motor Model S respectively. “This is far ahead of our rivals,” said Yu, using a phrase that has become a Huawei-related buzzword on the Chinese internet.
The S7 slightly beats out the Model S with a drag coefficient of 0.203. Meanwhile, it offers a 0 to 100 km/h (62mph) acceleration of 3.3 seconds, just under the 3.1 seconds reported by the Model S performance version but faster than the Porsche Taycan 4S, according to Yu.
Interior: The sleek, aerodynamically favorable sedan boasts of a larger cabin space than its major luxury competitors with an interior length of 1,910 mm. The Mercedes E300L and the Tesla Model S measure 1,898mm and 1,816mm in interior length respectively, according to figures cited by Huawei during the press conference.
The S7 also comes with a sporty design concept for the inside, featuring a wide dashboard, a 12.3-inch smart screen, as well as an oval-shaped steering wheel, allowing drivers to see the whole display, rather than having to view it through the steering wheel.
In addition, it has adopted so-called zero gravity seat technology for the front passenger seat. This allows the human body to take on a neutral spinal posture, reducing the amount of stress placed on bones and joints, while the backs of the rear seats are heated, ventilated, and 27/32° adjustable.
READ MORE: Huawei-backed Aito now has 50,000 orders for its redesigned M7 model
]]>Aito, a Chinese electric vehicle brand backed by Huawei, has received more than 50,000 non-refundable orders for its redesigned M7 in less than a month. The orders follow the Sept. 12 public launch of the sports utility vehicle, which features Huawei’s Harmony operating system and assisted driving technologies.
Why it matters: The latest sales figures, as revealed by a senior executive at Huawei, show tentative signs of a bounce-back for Aito from a months-long slump and could be a boost to the confidence of Huawei’s car manufacturing partners.
Details: The revamped M7 crossover has racked up more than 50,000 pre-orders with non-refundable deposits of RMB 5,000 ($685) as of Friday, Richard Yu, the chief executive of Huawei’s consumer business group, said in a post on Chinese social media app WeChat.
Context: Huawei on Sept. 12 unveiled the redesigned version of the M7 SUV, featuring Huawei’s Harmony operating system at a starting price of RMB 249,800 ($34,299), which is around RMB 70,000 lower than the initial version launched a year earlier.
Nio took a giant leap into the smartphone arena on Thursday with the much-anticipated launch of its Nio Phone, the first handset designed by a Chinese automaker. The new device is hitting the market at a price comparable to the latest flagship offerings by Apple and Huawei.
Having developed its own phone from the ground up, the electric vehicle maker expects to create an ecosystem across vehicles, devices, and services, which will provide a seamless experience for Nio users. The handset offers the purest form of the Android experience without any pre-installed apps or banner ads, chief executive William Li said during a press event in Shanghai on Thursday.
Some of the standout features Nio highlights are a master remote control for vehicles with options to control everything from windows to seats, as well as seamless streaming of videos, music, and meetings from smartphone to car infotainment screen. Here’s what impressed us most about Nio’s first Android phone.
Nio said the phone offers remote control for in-car devices which differs from most competitors by using Ultra Wideband (UWB) technology, an emerging wireless communication protocol that enables precise, speedy, and secure location tracking.
During a hands-on session where TechNode was present, a Nio ES8 SUV “greeted” the phone by turning its lights on when a Nio employee approached and automatically unlocked shortly before he reached for the door handle without taking out his phone. The smartphone also serves as a central hub to remotely operate the car’s air conditioning among other options at the touch of a single button.
The short-range, high-bandwidth digital radio technology allows fast data transmission with increased security compared with other wireless standards such as NFC and Bluetooth, which are often absent from existing phone models produced by domestic makers such as Huawei and Xiaomi, according to Nio staff. The first initiative of this kind was announced by Geely-backed rival Meizu a month earlier.
Several global automakers are also investing in the technology in collaboration with Apple. The US smartphone maker has reportedly been allowing BMW’s iX owners to unlock their cars using select iPhones or wearables since 2021, although most carmakers are currently unable to leverage the technology with Apple’s devices, Nio CEO William Li previously told Chinese reporters.
TechNode reporters also played the hit racing game title Asphalt on the in-car display with a Microsoft Xbox wireless controller. It offered a smooth experience which did not freeze or crash, as it runs in the smartphone’s background enabled with 5G services and a Qualcomm semiconductor.
Nio’s in-car experience also allows users to stream videos on Bilibili, follow turn-by-turn navigation on Amap, or transition to live meetings on Dingtalk from their phones through the car’s infotainment screen. Huawei earlier announced a similar Super Terminal feature, while Geely claimed such capabilities with the recent launch of its new Meizu flagship series and operating system, Flyeme Auto.
It is worth pointing out that the feature is different from screen mirroring, as it actually creates a “doppelganger” of the Nio Phone on the in-car dashboard so that users can use the smartphone and the in-car system simultaneously yet separately.
With its first self-branded device, Nio is one of the few Chinese automakers capable of integrating users’ smartphones with their car’s infotainment system at the operating system level. Such integration for Aito and Geely was enabled by their respective smartphone partners Huawei and Meizu.
The Nio Phone is powered by a Qualcomm high-end Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 processor, the same as existing flagship offerings such as Xiaomi’s Mi 13, Oppo’s Reno 11 Pro, and the Meizu 20. It also comes with a 6.81-inch 2K+E6 Samsung screen, providing a resolution of 3,200 x 1,440 pixels, a 120Hz refresh rate, and a peak brightness of 1,800nits.
The device features a triple-camera system that includes three 50MP cameras and has a large battery of 5,200mAh, supporting 50 W wireless charging and 10 W reverse charging. An entry-level version weighs 212 grams and measures 165.19 x 75.54 x 8.9mm.
The Nio Phone’s three versions come in seven colors, and are priced between RMB 6,499 and RMB 7,499 ($890-$1,027). Shipment is scheduled for Sept. 28. For comparison, Huawei’s latest Mate 60 Pro flagship phone costs from RMB 6,499, while Apple on Sept. 15 began selling its iPhone 15 series with a starting price of RMB 5,999 in China.
]]>Lynk & Co, a brand jointly owned by China’s Geely and Volvo Car, launched the 08, its long-anticipated plug-in hybrid crossover on Sept. 8. The automaker says the car has a starting price of RMB 208,800 ($28,815) and is powered by an in-house designed seven-nanometer (nm) chip, claimed by the company to be China’s first.
The compact sports utility vehicle is the first model under Lynk & Co which is exclusively plug-in hybrid. This marks a significant shift for Geely and Volvo as they make a determined move away from the internal combustion engine.
Having grappled with slowing growth in an increasingly competitive market, Lynk & Co expects the mid-sized 08 to be a high-volume model in the mainstream luxury SUV segment, competing against rival offerings including BYD’s Tang, Li Auto’s L7, and the Aito M5.
Why it matters: The Lynk & Co 08 is equipped with two SE1000 automotive chips, which is the first high-performance seven-nanometer semiconductor for cars designed by a Chinese company. The car can perform over 16 trillion operations per second (TOPS), Geely said in a statement. This is twice the number of Qualcomm’s Snapdragon SA8155P, the US tech giant’s flagship automotive cockpit platform.
Details: The Lynk & Co 08 uses a 1.5-liter four-cylinder engine along with a large 39.8-kilowatt-hour battery pack, providing a maximum driving range of 205 kilometers (127 miles) in all-electric mode and 1,400 km on a full tank plus full charge. Delivery is scheduled the begin later this month.
Context: Lynk & Co reported a modest 6% year-on-year growth in sales for the first half of this year, while its peer Zeekr, a premium electric vehicle brand launched by Geely in early 2021, posted a remarkable 124% annual growth over the same period. Seven-year-old Lynk & Co, which formerly focused on China’s gas-powered vehicle segment, sold 180,127 vehicles last year, representing an 18.3% decline from a year ago.
OnePlus launched its Nord Buds 2 globally at a budget-friendly price of $59 in April. Our team received a gray model for a two-week trial. Here’s our take on the new earbuds.
The Nord Buds 2, may cost $20 more than their predecessors, but they’re still some of the most affordable earbuds on the market and deliver solid audio quality and impressive active noise cancellation (ANC). Equipped with four microphones, the stylish earbuds – also available in white – come with a 12.4mm dynamic titanium driver, a 36-hour battery life, and IP55 water and dust resistance.
Stylish design and comfortable fit
With a stylish look and sustainably sourced materials, the Nord Buds 2 ought to appeal to a younger consumer base. The smooth, eye-catching design is augmented with speckled accents on the buds’ bodies, though at first glance this can be mistaken for specks of dust.
The compact, oval-shaped charging case and earbuds may be made of plastic, but they feel durable. There are three sizes of silicon tips available, the buds weighing 4.7 grams per earpiece, and despite somewhat chubby stems, they sat in my ears comfortably.
The snug fit, combined with an IP55 rating which means they are resistant to light sweat and rain, makes the earbuds suitable for wearing during exercise. Over the fortnight I had them, I walked and jogged with them in and they didn’t fall out.
Audio quality and active noise cancellation
For the price, the Nords Buds 2 deliver a relatively crisp sound quality with clear vocals, soothing treble, and convincing deep bass. The plus-sized 12.4 mm drivers feature a larger diaphragm with titanium coating, meaning users rarely need to turn the volume up beyond 50%.
Impressively, the Nord Buds 2 are the first Nord product with up to 25dB2 of active noise cancellation. While noise-canceling is a standard feature in more expensive wireless earbuds, it is still not common in earbuds costing less than $100. ANC is effective at muting consistent low-frequency sounds, and can block some high-pitch frequencies too, without eliminating them.
A surprising drawback is that the earbuds lack in-ear detection, meaning they are unable to automatically detect if they are being worn or removed.
Battery life and tap controls
The Nord Buds 2 come with a 480 mAh battery that gives you seven hours of usage. With the case, they work for up to 36 hours. However, when using ANC, the battery life is reduced to five hours for the earbuds and 27 hours with the charging case.
The earbuds support fast-charging and can gain five hours more battery life on just a 10 minute charge. Based on our test, the buds can support a two-hour commute every day and only need to be charged once a week.
The Nord Buds 2 come with built-in controls for quick adjustments, such as:
There is no tap control for volume however, and sometimes you can trigger commands without meaning to: when we went to adjust the earbuds to fit our ears, we accidentally turned off the noise-canceling mode. There is also no option to seamlessly switch between devices while wearing the buds. Each time you change from a laptop to a phone or tablet, you have to reconnect the earbuds, adding a degree of inconvenience.
Conclusion
In general, the Nord Buds 2 are great value at $59. They deliver good sound quality and functional noise-canceling, despite lacking in-ear detection and seamless connectivity.
Pros
Cons
On Wednesday, Chinese phone brand Honor launched its third-generation foldable phone the Honor Magic V2 at a new product launch event. The company announced it as the slimmest foldable on the market, measuring an ultra-thin 9.9mm in foldable state and weighing just 231 grams.
Why it matters: Honor claims its new device breaks the boundary between regular smartphones and foldable phones. The Magic V2 is comparable in size to a standard smartphone – for comparison, the iPhone 14 Pro Max is 7.85mm thick and weighs 240 grams.
Details: When smartphone makers first introduced new generation foldable phones in 2019, the devices’ foldable state was commonly around 16mm. By 2022, the thinnest model on the market, the Xiaomi Mix Fold 2, measured 11.2mm. The Honor Magic V2 is the first such device with a thickness below 1cm when folded.
Context: According to research platform Counterpoint, global foldable shipments grew 64% year-on-year to 2.5 million units in the first quarter of 2023, while the overall global smartphone market faced a 14.2% year-on-year decline during the same period.
On Thursday, Xiaomi released a Disney-themed Civi 3 to celebrate Disney’s 100th anniversary. The limited-edition phone is based on Xiaomi’s mid-range Civi 3, which debuted in China on May 25. The limited edition model incorporates elements from Disney’s classic Mickey Mouse character into the design and features a Disney 100 logo on the back.
Why it matters: As China faces a slowdown in consumer electronics consumption, phone makers are looking for new ways to encourage sales and brand exposure.
Details: The limited edition phone marks the first collaborative product between Xiaomi and Disney. It is also the first time that a phone brand has cooperated with Disney on actual device design. Currently, Xiaomi’s Disney 100th anniversary series products are offered exclusively in China, with a global launch yet to be announced.
Context: On March 28, Redmi, a subsidiary owned by Xiaomi, launched the world’s first Harry Potter-themed smartphone. The Redmi Note 12 Turbo Harry Potter edition comes with customized Harry Potter design elements such as the lightning scar, golden snitch, and the iconic Hogwarts logo.
]]>On Monday, phone maker Honor introduced its new mid-range flagship models Honor 90 and 90 Pro in China. The lineup is the successor to last year’s Honor 80 series and features a 200MP camera sensor, a quad-curved screen, a 5,000mAh battery, and the Qualcomm Snapdragon chipset. It is priced at RMB 2,499 ($350) for the standard model with 12GB + 256GB RAM.
Honor also announced that the two devices will have GMS (Google Mobile Services) included in the global versions.
Why it matters: As China approaches a major mid-year shopping festival known as 618 (June 18), many phone makers are releasing new affordable models to boost sales. In addition to Honor, Oppo launched its mid-range Reno10 series on May 24, while Vivo will unveil its Vivo S17 series on May 31.
Details: As part of Honor’s new mid-range phone line, the Honor 90 series boasts a high-performance imaging system and display.
Context: Due to a slowdown in domestic consumption, China’s smartphone shipments declined 8% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2023, reaching their lowest level since the first quarter of 2020, according to Counterpoint.
At the BEYOND Expo 2023 tech conference in Macau on Thursday, the co-founder of phone maker Nothing, Carl Pei, held a fireside talk with Richard Lai, a senior reporter at Engadget, to discuss the challenges and development of the brand.
Previously the co-founder of Chinese smartphone company OnePlus, Pei founded Nothing Technology Limited in London in October 2020. Positioning itself as a design-focused phone brand, Nothing’s first mid-range model, the Nothing Phone(1), was released in July 2022. It was particularly notable for the array of lights on its back, known as the Glyph. The Glyph functions as a notification system, flashing in different combinations and colors, and accompanied by varying vibrations.
Late last year, Nothing opened its first physical store, in London’s Soho district, featuring products such as the Ear(1) wireless earbuds and Nothing Phone(1). In October, Nothing will celebrate its third anniversary with the launch of its new flagship device, the Nothing Phone(2). It will also use this launch to enter the US market, having to date targeted India, Germany, and the UK for its phones.
Richard Lai, a senior reporter at tech media outlet Engadget, interviewed Pei about the development of Nothing as part of a fireside chat at BEYOND. The below excerpts highlight the key segments of their 30-minute discussion. Pei’s quotes have been edited and condensed for clarity.
In the beginning, the main challenge to kickstart the business was the shortage in the supply chain, coupled with being a new company and lacking trust in the market. However, we managed to overcome these issues over time. We simply spoke about our ambitions and explained why we had a chance at being successful. Thankfully, we were able to convince some people to support us and release our products. It unlocked the next phase of our journey, with supply chain resources and capital issues resolved.
We recognized an opportunity within the phone industry, considering that there are only a few big companies like Apple, Samsung, and a few Chinese brands. When a company becomes big and successful, it would not want to take substantial risks. The company knows its customers and the kind of products they want, so the barrier to entry is high. This situation positions us as the only company that can do things differently. Smartphones have been around for almost 20 years, and have become monotonous of late. No matter who you talk to, whether it’s our team, consumers, or even our sales partners or carriers, everybody is afraid that there’s no more innovation. So I think that’s what we really want to play with, for example: how can we make technology more fun? Again, I think we’re in a very unique position to do that.
We have a strong design team. One of our co-founders started out from a well-known fashion brand. We also have the former head of design from Dyson, who joined us to lead our design efforts. Although I have a good eye for design, I’m more like an editor. I only intervene in very extreme cases, when they’re obviously going down the wrong path, but normally, I’m pretty hands off when it comes to design.
We have big ambitions, but as a company, we operate in a practical and pragmatic manner. When building our first phone, we did not have the engineering capabilities that we really wanted. We were actually hiring the team as we were building the product. A lot of the engineering work had to be outsourced to third parties. We needed time to become more confident in our engineering capabilities. People have very high expectations when you’re selling a flagship, but our company started off with a mid-range product (Nothing Phone 1). We always wanted to make a flagship device, but we just needed to take a step-by-step approach. Over the past year, our engineering team has gotten ten times stronger. Our design team has become stronger as well, and we can now finally take the step to create a genuine flagship product.
We are headquartered in London with a team of 450 employees. We really believe in leveraging the strengths of different regions. Prior to moving to London, I stayed in Shenzhen for 12 years. We have strategically distributed the hardware team and supply chain in Shenzhen, while building the software team in Taipei. Additionally, we have our manufacturing in India and small-sale offices in the Middle East. Our central thought is to connect the world’s best talent and strength from different fields.
When it comes to our products, we are already in two big product categories, audio and smartphone. Therefore, rather than diversifying into numerous products, I think, we should focus on expanding our penetration and market share within the products we already have.
For our first phone, we lacked sufficient engineering capabilities on the software side. So, when we asked our users about the primary reason they bought our product, the number one answer was design. I think our first phone primarily stood out due to its hardware design. However, this year, we’re excited to bring that design expertise to the software side as well. I’m looking forward to this because if people already appreciate us for our design, imagine the impact when we apply it to our software too.
The Glyph Interface consists of five light components on the back of Phone(1) that provide you with a new way to communicate and interact with the Phone(1). That’s the concept of calm technology. You don’t have to actively engage with the phone, but it still gives you important information. For instance, when you’re driving a plane as a pilot, there are signals and lights in your periphery. You need to focus on what is ahead of you, but you can still see what is going on around you. There are so many features that we are looking forward to updating in the Glyph interface. We’ve been criticized a lot that it’s just a phone with some funky lights on the back. Hopefully, we will optimize this feature.
The real evolution is coming soon. Basically, it will allow you to set different light patterns depending on who’s calling you. So you can see whether it is your significant other, your boss, or somebody less important, and then decide whether you need to answer it or not. When you charge wireless on the back, it lights up to signal your charging state. But I think we’re barely scratching the surface. Our intention is to enable users to put their phones down, for instance, during dinner with friends, Nothing phone can notify you about what’s going on without you paying too much attention to it.
Even big companies are starting to take inspiration from us, companies that are way more successful. At least we’re moving up the value chain in that regard. We want to ignite change, then inspire others to be a part of that change. Overall, the industry is getting more interesting.
]]>Oppo released the flip foldable phone Find N2 Flip globally in February as the brand’s first foray into the flip foldable smartphones. The device has been on sale in Europe and Asia since March, with a price of 849 euros ($978). The phone comes with 8GB RAM and 256GB storage and in two colors: purple and black. Our team received a black model for review and tried it out for a fortnight.
The Find N2 Flip is the smaller flip foldable in Oppo’s first foldable release. The Find N2 is a bigger standard foldable that gives users twice the usual screen space. The Find N2 Flip is well-designed, likely to appeal to younger customers with lightweight design, large secondary display, and pocketable size.
Powered by a MediaTek Dimensity 9000+ processor, the Find N2 Flip offers a 6.8-inch AMOLED main screen and a 3.26-inch external screen. Flip phones tend to have small batteries due to their compact bodies and large hinges, but the Find N2 Flip managed to use a large battery of 4300mAh. In addition, the camera system includes a 50MP main camera with a Sony IMX890 sensor, 8MP ultra-wide camera, and a 32MP front camera.
The Find N2 Flip is surprisingly thin and light, weighing just 191g and measuring 7.45mm when folded. The device’s size when folded resembles a small makeup mirror – it’s delicate and compact and can be easily placed in a small bag or pocket. When handled in the palm of the hand, the Find N2 flip delivers a smooth and natural feel.
With 3.26 inches, the Find N2 Flip’s external screen is the largest of any flip smartphone currently available. Despite the device’s lightweight and pocketable size, its external screen is big enough to showcase meaningful information and also allows users to check notifications, play music, answer calls, and take photos, so there’s no need to flip open the phone constantly. The Find N2 Flip offers six widgets for its cover screen, including weather, timer, audio recorder, camera, calendar, and earbud controls. Though the cover screen functions are currently limited, Oppo has repeatedly promised that it will expand the selection over time.
Once opened up, the device feels a bit less convenient, the phone seems a little long and isn’t as easily swipe-able, especially after easy access on the external screen. The size of Find N2 Flip after unfolding is 166.2mm x 75.2mm x 7.45mm, while the 6.8-inch AMOLED inner screen has a ratio of 21:9.
Adding to its cuteness factor and a clear attraction for younger users, the Find N2 Flip comes with five exclusive cartoon pet wallpapers. Users can choose different animals to display on the external screen, with cartoon pets displaying different animated states based upon how the device is being used. For example, when listening to a song, the pets on the wallpaper will “listen along.” Users can also click on the screen to “interact” with the pets.
Oppo uses a new Flexion Hinge, which ensures better resistance to dust, leaves little gap when closing the device and makes the fold barely visible. Although we admittedly only used the device for two weeks, we could hardly see the crease of the inner screen from the front and could only view a faint hint from the side under bright lighting. According to the company, even after 216,000 folds and unfolds, lab tests found that the crease remains almost imperceptible from most angles.
When it comes to smartphone design, less space usually means less room for other components, like batteries. The improved, miniaturized hinge in Find N2 Flip made room for a high-capacity, fast-charging battery. To improve battery performance further, Oppo also worked closely with MediaTek to create an optimized version of the Dimensity 9000+ chip. In addition to the large battery capacity of 4300mAh, 44W SUPERVOOC fast charging allows users to go from nearly empty to 50 percent in just 23 minutes, and to 100 percent within one hour. Under normal usage conditions with screen time of between four and five hours, we were easily able to make the batter last for a day and a half or even two days. However, the device does not support wireless charging.
The phone handles multitasking with ease and glides through multiple apps without a stutter. It’s unfortunate that the Find N2 flip is only available in a single memory and storage configuration of 8GB RAM/256GB internationally. In the Chinese market, the phone options are more diversified with 12GB RAM or 16GB RAM and 512GB of storage.
The Oppo Find N2 Flip is equipped with a 50MP main camera with a Sony IMX890 sensor, an 8MP ultra-wide-angle lens, and a 32MP front camera. The 50MP main camera performs well in the day, offering detailed, crisp, and natural-colored imagery. Oppo’s self-developed MariSilicon X imaging system introduces better night shooting capabilities.
Here are some examples of the device’s daylight and nighttime photography capabilities from our trial:
The Find N2 Flip’s foldability also expands its photography features. With the cameras still operable when the device is partially folded, the phone can be placed on a surface for stable photography or video recording without the use of a tripod. It can also be used as a sort of camcorder when opened up to 90º, making for a more stable filming experience compared to the standard smartphone.
Although the Find N2 Flip is Oppo’s first flip foldable phone, it provides a mature product experience. The elegant design, compact body, weight, strong camera performance, and large battery all make Find N2 Flip an impressive option in the foldable phone category.
Pros
Cons
Vivo released two new foldable flagship phones on Thursday, a large Vivo X Fold2 and a clamshell foldable Vivo X Flip, the first time the brand has released a smaller-style flip phone. The second generation of Vivo’s foldable line, the Vivo X Fold 2 is the first foldable smartphone powered by Snapdragon 8 Gen 2. The phone is now available for pre-order in the Chinese market and will start shipping on 28 April.
Why it matters: As the larger smartphone market sees a sustained period of slowing growth, brands are increasingly looking to foldable devices to boost flagging sales and diversify their offerings. In 2022, sales of foldable phones in the Chinese market reached 2.83 million units, up 144% year-on-year, according to research firm CINNO. Smartphone shipments in China in 2022 experienced a 22% drop from the year before, hitting 272 million. Despite strong growth, foldable still remains a niche sector however.
Details: With the inclusion of a Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset, the first time Qualcomm’s high-end processor has been used on a foldable phone, the X Fold 2 is being positioned as a major flagship smartphone by Vivo.
Context: Vivo has a lot of catching up to do in the foldable sector, ranking fifth in China’s foldable market in 2022 and taking just a 5.8% share of a market dominated by Huawei and Samsung, according to CINNO. Huawei’s share of the market last year was 51%, followed by Samsung at 22.8%, and Oppo at 7.7%.
On Thursday, Xiaomi released the upper-end version of its flagship phone, the Xiaomi 13 Ultra. Working with Leica, the Chinese smartphone maker is attempting to position the device as more like professional camera in a smartphone rather than a smartphone with powerful cameras. The 13 Ultra features a rear camera with four lenses, while the main camera uses a 50MP 1-inch Sony IMX989 sensor, offering a physical aperture that opens as wide as f/1.9. The phone is priced from RMB 5,999 to RMB 7,299 ($870 to $1,142).
Why it matters: This update to the Ultra series, which has long been Xiaomi’s smartphone offering, indicates the firm’s continuing ambition to push smartphones more into the realm of professional camera devices, with photography seen as the main selling point over other functionalities.
Details: To back up its pro-camera ambition, the Xiaomi 13 Ultra cameras use Leica’s newly designed Vario-Summicron lens, with the device also offering manual aperture and optical stabilization. Xiaomi has also added professional photography accessories, including a wireless handle with built-in buttons and dial to give the phone a more camera-like grip.
Context: Xiaomi’s income slid significantly in 2022, totaling RMB 280 billion ($40.68 billion), a decrease of 14.7% year-on-year, according to its financial results. But the firm said it had still managed to increase investment in research and development. In 2022, Xiaomi invested about RMB 16 billion ($2.32 billion) in R&D, an increase of 21% year-on-year, CEO and founder Lei Jun announced at this week’s launch event. Lei reiterated that the brand’s focus on the high-end phone market will not change in the long term. Lei estimated that the firm’s investment will reach RMB 200 billion ($29 billion) this year.
Vivo, the Chinese phone maker known for its budget-friendly devices, released its new V27 series in India in early March, priced from $289 to $459. The mid-range smartphone lineup consists of the V27, V27 Pro, and V27e, with the V27 Pro being the premium model. TechNode has been trying V27 Pro out for the last fortnight and below are our thoughts.
The V27 Pro features a 6.78-inch 120Hz AMOLED screen, 50MP front and rear cameras, a 4,600mAh battery, 66W fast charging support, and a FunTouch OS 13 system based on Android 13. The Aura Light Portrait System is equipped with a Sony IMX766V Sensor and OIS (Optical Image Stabilization) support, which can create clear natural night photos in low-light environments.
Powered by Dimensity 8200, a competitive 4nm chip, the V27 Pro is available in two colors, namely the Magic Blue and Noble Black. It offers three storage variants: 8GB + 128GB, 8GB + 256GB, 12GB + 512GB; the prices are respectively 37,999, 39,999, and 42,999 rupees ($462, $486, $523).
The V27 Pro’s most unique design features include its incredibly thin body design, color-changing back panel glass, and a 3D curved display with a 120Hz refresh rate.
Vivo shaved the device’s thickness down to 7.4mm, making the V27 Pro the thinnest phone with a curved edge screen in the company’s history. The thickness of the Noble Black edition is 7.36mm while the thickness of the Magic Blue edition is 7.4mm. The thin design also makes the phone lightweight, weighing only 182g. But the phone does feel occasionally slippery in hand without a case, however. So the accompanying transparent phone case is a must if you want to ensure a good grip on the device.
The phone’s back cover can change colors from light blue to dark blue depending on the light, adding to the phone’s stylish feel.
The V27 Pro offers a 6.78-inch 3D curved screen with a refresh rate of 120Hz and ultra-high brightness. The 120Hz refresh rate and a visual enhancement feature provide a smooth gaming and video-watching experience. The 3D curved screen offers rich detail, but the device lacks stereo speakers, meaning the sound quality of the phone is average at best.
The V27 Pro features a 50MP primary rear camera with an f/1.9 aperture and OIS (optical image stabilization). It is assisted by an 8MP ultra-wide lens, a 2MP macro camera, and a ring-shaped dual-LED flash. On the front, the phone gets a 50MP selfie camera with an f/2.5 aperture and autofocus support.
The rear camera of V27 Pro has a 50MP OIS Ultra-Sensing Camera with Sony IMX766 sensor, which allows users to shoot clear, natural, and atmospheric night photos with ease. In addition, OIS allows for a longer exposure and increases light intake by six times, producing more stable snapshots and boosting image quality in low-light conditions.
The following are some night street scenes we took with the device:
On cloudy days, the V27 Pro struggles to accentuate and enhance the natural light. Images taken in overcast conditions can therefore look a little dull and mediocre. However, the camera performs much better in warmer, brighter climates. Here are some photos we took to demonstrate the contrast between cloudy days and sunny days shooting with the phone:
The V27 Pro comes with a new wedding-style portrait feature, which is inspired by styles from Indian weddings. We did not have the opportunity to shoot a wedding, but this feature is worth exploring. The mode allows users to select three different filters, such as Prosecco, New Retro, and Pastels. Each one creates unique aesthetics, allowing users to choose the best style based on their preferences.
The V27 Pro is powered by a MediaTek Dimensity 8200 (4nm) chipset as its core processor, which is paired with 8GB/12GB of LPDDR5 RAM and 128GB/256GB UFS 3.1 storage. The storage isn’t expandable. The V27 Pro scored 839,769 points on the AnTuTu software benchmarking system, which is a good performance for mid-range phones in similar price ranges. As a reference, the Apple iPhone SE 2022 (iPhone SE 3) AnTuTu overall benchmark score is 762,983. Daily tasks such as watching videos, screen scrolling, sending messages, and playing games are relatively smooth compared to other mid-range phones. However, the phone does slow down and heat up a bit when running multiple apps in the background or playing high-performance games for more than an hour.
The V27 Pro comes pre-installed with the latest version of FunTouch OS 13, which is based on Android 13. It is a highly-customized mobile OS system based on Android. The “app pinning” feature helps to secure sensitive data that is convenient when someone else uses your phone. It is the capability to lock an application on the device’s screen and restricts the user from accessing anything else on the phone. However, this feature comes with a certain limitation as you will affect other functions on your device such as incoming calls, notifications & alarms.
Its split-screen mode is also effective, especially when wanting to copy information from one app to another, or when sending a message without interrupting the video-playing.
While the phone comes with a 4600 mAh battery and support for 66W fast charging, it lacks wireless charging capability. Another downside is that the phone comes pre-installed with a slew of unnecessary apps. Also disappointing is the phone’s lack of dust and water resistance, making it less adaptable to different conditions.
The V27 Pro is an attractive phone with a decent design and impressive nighttime photography capabilities. It can be a good mid-range phone for customers with a limited budget.
Geely’s high-end car brand Lynk & Co will be the first sub-brand from Geely to incorporate an in-car operating system called Flyme Auto in its upcoming sports utility vehicle called the 08, the brands announced on March 24. Flyme is developed by Xingji Meizu, a company established by Geely’s founder after Geely acquired smartphone brand Meizu last July.
Why it matters: Lynk’s use of the Meizu operating system is the result of Geely’s long-term effort to develop more car technology in-house. The collaboration will be a test for both brands — Geely and Meizu — with the former focusing on building its software self-sufficiency and the latter looking to revive its diminishing smartphone business by testing its system on its new owner.
Details: The operating system, Flyme Auto, is built jointly by Meizu and Ecarx (an auto tech startup backed by Geely). It is an all-new digital cockpit and infotainment system based on the electronic architecture of Meizu.
Context: Geely made its first foray into the Chinese smartphone market in late 2021, hiring talent from domestic electronics companies such as ZTE and Xiaomi, and setting up a venture called Xingji Shidai in which chairman Li holds a 55% share. Xingji Shidai acquired the majority stake in Chinese phone maker Meizu last July, TechCrunch reported.
On Thursday afternoon, Huawei updated its flagship smartphones P series and Mate series with P60 and Mate X3. The phone release was part of Huawei’s spring product launch, which took place in Shanghai. In a bid to show its relevance and strength in consumer electronics, Huawei released 10 new products. The entire event lasted for more than four hours, and was livestreamed via the Chinese telecom giant’s Weibo account and its official website, with views on the former peaking at 600,000.
Why it matters: The release of so many new devices was seen as an attempt by Huawei to demonstrate that its product research and development capabilities have not been dented by years of controversy and constraints. “We have been sanctioned for four years, but the spring is warm and the future is promising,” Yu Chengdong, the CEO of Huawei’s Consumer Business Group, said at the product launch. Other Chinese tech executives, such as founder of the Chinese internet portal Sohu Zhang Chaoyang and Weibo CEO Wang Gaofei, also attended the launch event.
Details: The Huawei P60 series and Mate X3 mark the first time that the two flagship series have been updated at the same time. The launch also appeared to dispel previous reports that Huawei was considering selling its mobile phone unit.
Context: “2023 will be Huawei’s first year of returning to normal operations, despite ongoing US restrictions becoming the new norm,” Huawei’s rotating chairman Eric Xu said in an annual New Year’s message to employees at the end of 2022.
Oppo released two flagship phones, the Find X6 and the Find X6 Pro, at its new product launch event on Tuesday afternoon. The Find X6 series features a triple camera design, with a wide angle lens with large 1-inch sensor, a periscope telephoto lens, and an ultra wide angle lens, as Oppo looks to dramatically upgrade its products’ imaging capabilities.
Why it matters: In the past two years, rivals Vivo and Xiaomi have made significant progress in imaging, with the latter working with Leica for example, while Oppo’s camera systems have been seen as lagging behind as the company prioritized aesthetics. The new Find X6 phones, which are being positioned as high-end flagship models, are an attempt to regain the ground lost.
Details: The new X6 series was launched in the mainland China market only on Tuesday with prices starting from RMB 4,499 ($652). Equipped with three main cameras and advanced optical technology, the Find X6 series brings what Oppo claimed is “unprecedented image quality to both photo and video shooting on all three cameras.”
Context: According to market analysis platform StatCounter, Oppo accounted for 5.53% of China’s mobile phone market in February 2023, with Vivo making up 8.15% and Xiaomi 7.14%.
OnePlus, a Chinese phone brand owned by Oppo, revealed its new Ace 2V at a product launch on Tuesday, highlighting its high performance stats and low price tag as it looks to accrue market share in a segment long dominated by Xiaomi.
Why it matters: The Ace 2V provides a new threat to Xiaomi’s Redmi series when it comes to price sensitive consumers, a field where the latter has traditionally excelled. The basic Redmi K60 model is priced at RMB 2,999; the standard Ace 2V undercuts it by RMB 700.
Details: The Ace 2V phone began pre-sales on Mar. 7, though is currently only available in China. According to OnePlus, it will be renamed OnePlus Nord 3 in overseas markets, but its global release date is as yet unknown.
Context: In December last year, major Chinese phone maker Oppo announced that it would be investing RMB 10 billion ($1.43 billion) over three years as part of a “dual primary” strategy aimed at enhancing and clarifying OnePlus’ status. The two firms merged in 2021.
TechNode got hold of Vivo’s X90 Pro, the premium product of the Chinese phone maker’s new flagship series launched globally on February 3, and spent the last fortnight trying it out. Below are our thoughts on the phone.
The X90 Pro excels at visual capture. This is unsurprising given Vivo’s collaboration with optics master Zeiss and the phone’s 1-inch camera sensor. The X90 Pro introduces consumers to Vivo’s own optical image stabilization (OIS) technology, allowing for more intelligent and precise stabilization correction. It also boasts improved light sensitivity, aperture size, and natural color processing. The phone uses MediaTek Dimensity 9200 as the core processing chip, which we found gave it plenty of power for daily use plus enough left over to indulge in high-performance gaming.
The series was first released in China last November, starting with the X90 Pro. Now, you can buy the X90 in China and Southeast Asia, while the X90 Pro has reached stores in Southeast Asia and Europe. The new series ranges in price from $600 to $950, depending on model, storage, and where in Asia you’re shopping.
If you’re thinking of buying a new phone, it’s also worth comparing other offerings in a similar price range to Vivo’s X90 series. For example, Xiaomi’s 13 series will be launched globally on Feb. 26, costing an estimated $650 to $1,000.
For the series, Vivo partnered with German optical firm Zeiss to develop a large 1-inch IMX989 sensor. On the X90 Pro, the effort resulted in a stunning imaging system that excels in various scenarios and offers a wide aperture that opens up to f/1.75.
Apart from Zeiss components, the X90 Pro is equipped with Vivo’s exclusively customized V2 Chip, which provides four major functional improvements on the imaging front. For example, the chip adopts a newly upgraded AI noise reduction algorithm, which boosts the main chip for further enhanced resolution in photos and videos captured at night. Some of our sample images were shot on a drizzling, foggy night in Shanghai, but the phone still managed to capture crisp, vivid images.
X90 Pro handled nighttime photography well in our tests. With a clean and depth-enhanced output, the camera displayed a similar level of professional, vivid imagery to photos taken with a large DSLR camera. In a richly lit environment, we can see the light and shadow effect between the buildings in great detail.
It is worth mentioning that when we shot a street lamp at night, the halo effect was minimized, and glare was almost absent. The phone also produces little noise in low-light settings.
X90 Pro also uses ZEISS Natural Color 2.0 color profile, giving photos a realistic look. The two daylight photos above were taken in a natural tone setting. Many Android phones tend to render photos too bright, but the X90 Pro avoids this issue.
X90 Pro features a 6.78-inch 3D curved screen with eye protection mode. With refinement of software and hardware, the screen decreases flicker and automatically adjusts brightness according to the ambient light and time of day, thereby reducing eye fatigue in dark environments. Besides, the new luminescent material reduces the level of harmful blue light.
However, the X90 Pro only has a curved screen option, which may not be the first choice for users who favor a flat screen.
The X90 Pro features vegan leather which feels good in the hand and is dirt-proof. But this may not be popular with younger customers. Moreover, it’s a bit heavy to hold and somewhat lengthy to carry in the pocket.
Vivo used a dual-chip setup for the new X90 series, including MediaTek Dimensity 9200 and vivo V2 Chip. With Dimensity 9200, X90 Pro, and X90 have ultrahigh AnTuTu Benchmark scores (a cell phone specs testing site) of 1.26 million and 1.22 million, representing a massive leap in performance.
We played Genshin Impact for 30 minutes, a mobile game known for its high demand on phone systems, setting it at the highest quality of 60 frames per second. The display was smooth when running pictures and fighting monsters. During playtime, the phone’s temperature was around 42 Celsius (107.6 Fahrenheit).
The phone’s user interface could use some improvement, as its default setting is a little crowded with all the recommended apps, games, and advertisements.
The X90 Pro offers a 120w wired fast charge and a 4,870 mAh large battery that takes only 29 mins to charge to 100%. For now, the series doesn’t support wireless charging.
In about two weeks’ use, the biggest advantage of the Vivo X90 Pro we found was its camera. It’s a good choice for photographers and can help hobbyists take better snaps. The vegan leather case design makes the phone unique. Its dual-chip setup assures smooth daily use and entertainment. As for long-term performance, it may need further observation when comparing MediaTek Dimensity 9200 with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2. Below, TechNode summarized the main advantages and drawbacks we found with the Vivo X90 Pro:
Pros
Cons
China saw smartphone sales slump 14% in 2022, marking the fifth consecutive year of decline, according to a Friday report by Hong Kong-headquartered consultancy firm Counterpoint.
Why it matters: Chinese smartphone sales reached their lowest level in a decade as consumers delayed replacing their smartphones due to sluggish macroeconomic conditions and Covid-19 containment measures.
Details: The top three companies in the Chinese smartphone market last year were Vivo, Apple, and Oppo, holding 19.2%, 18%, and 17.5% of the market respectively.
Context: Chinese smartphone shipments also reflect an uncertain market, with total shipments of about 286 million units in 2022, down 13.2% from a year earlier and the largest drop ever, market research firm IDC said on Sunday. This is the first time shipments have fallen below 300 million since 2013.
Major Chinese phone maker Oppo will treat Oppo and OnePlus as “dual-primary” brands, it was announced at an event to mark the 9th anniversary of OnePlus on Dec. 17. Oppo will invest RMB 10 billion ($1.43 billion) in OnePlus in the next three years as part of the new strategy, according to Liu Zuohu (Pete Lau), founder of OnePlus and chief product officer of Oppo.
Why it matters: Since the two firms merged in 2021, OnePlus’ positioning has become somewhat unclear – it offers a less premium experience compared to Oppo and has lost some of its unique features. The new strategy and investment seem intended as a strong push to make OnePlus stand out again.
Details: In addition to the $1.43 billion investment, Oppo will also share more resources in terms of technology, retail channels, and after-sales services with OnePlus.
Context: Liu founded OnePlus in 2013 after working at Oppo for 15 years. The two companies belong to BBK Electronics, with OnePlus manufacturing their phones in Oppo’s factories.
Chinese phone maker Oppo launched two new foldable phones – Find N2 and Find N2 Flip – for the Chinese market at a release event on Thursday. Available in three colors, the Find N2 has a price range of RMB 7,999 – RMB 8,999 ($1,147 – $1,290). The Find N2 Flip also comes in three colors and is priced from RMB 5,999 to RMB 6,999 ($860 – $1,004). The two models will initially be available only in China, with shipping starting on Dec. 23 for Find N2 and Dec. 30 for Find N2 Flip. Oppo confirmed to TechNode that the latter model would be introduced to overseas markets soon.
Why it matters: Oppo released its first foldable phone, Find N, last year, giving the brand a 4.6% market share (in Chinese) in the Chinese foldable market in the third quarter of 2022. This year, the firm focused on slimming down the weight of its next iteration. The new tablet-like Find N2 is even lighter than some regular phones, such as the iPhone 14 Pro Max.
Find N2: The Oppo Find N2 uses Qualcomm’s high-end processor Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1, which was introduced earlier this year but has now been superseded by the Gen 2.
Find N2 Flip: Oppo’s first flip-style foldable phone has a 3.26-inch rounded rectangular screen that the firm claims is the largest external screen of any phone in its class.
Context: The foldable phone market has seen strong growth both in China and overseas in the last year. Counterpoint Research projected that global foldable phone shipments will increase 77.8% yearly to 16 million units in 2022, and hit 26 million in 2023.
Chinese phone maker Oppo on Wednesday released its first smart health device, called OHealth H1. A small oval-shaped device that can take six key health measurements, OHealth H1 is targeted at family healthcare scenarios and daily monitoring use.
Why it matters: Oppo has been expanding its investment in digital health devices in recent years, hoping to diversify its offering and “use technological innovation to meet evolving healthcare needs,” according to a spokesperson.
Details: The OHealth H1 features six health data monitoring functions: blood oxygen, electrocardiogram, heart and lung auscultation, heart rate, body temperature, and sleep tracking.
Chinese phone maker Xiaomi unveiled its new Xiaomi 13 Series at a release event on Dec. 11, with camera systems from Leica and nine colors for the standard version and four for the Pro version. The new addition to the brand’s annually-updated flagship offering, the Xiaomi 13 series has a price range of RMB 3,999 to RMB 6,299 ($572.97 to $902.51).
Why it matters: Xiaomi’s flagship is a key indicator of the firm’s intention to appeal to a more premium market segment, with top-of-the-range specs and relatively affordable prices.
Details: The Xiaomi 13 series come with top specs in major areas, including a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset, a high-brightness display, and cameras with a large sensor.
Context: Xiaomi is the third-largest phone vendor globally by shipments in the third quarter, accounting for 14% of the market, according to hardware insight firm Canalys.
Chinese smartphone maker Vivo’s sub-brand iQOO announced its new flagship phone the iQOO 11 on Thursday. The phone, which will be available in certain markets across Southeast Asia for the first time, adopts Qualcomm’s latest high-end chipset Snapdragon 8 Gen 2.
Why it matters: The iQOO 11 introduces an innovative update to the adaptive refresh rate, supporting partial refresh to increase power efficiency.
Details: In addition to the Qualcomm chipset, the iQOO 11 offers high-spec storage and memory chips. The phone also adopts a new cooling system to maintain peak hardware performance when running games.
Context: Founded in 2019, iQOO focuses on gaming phones for the Chinese and Southeast Asian markets.
Phantom, a sub-brand of Chinese smartphone maker Tecno, released the X2, an update to its premium phone series, on Wednesday at a release event held in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Tecno operates and serves in over 70 global markets. Transsion, Tecno’s parent firm, accounted for 48% of the African smartphone market in the second quarter of 2022, according to IDC, with Tecno alone taking 9.81% of the African smartphone market as of November.
Last year, Tecno relaunched its Phantom brand with a focus on the premium smartphone market amid an ambitious global expansion plan. The annual flagship, Phantom X2 5G, is the second generation of this brand and priced at 2,699 in South African Rands ($718) for all the first batches of available regions, including India, Nigeria, Kenya, Saudi Arabia, Colombia, Turkey, and the Philippines.
The phone has a decent body design and operating system, as well as long battery life. The device’s occasional inconsistent camera performance might undermine its ambition to compete with rivals’ high-spec flagship models.
The Phantom X2 5G adopts a dual-curved body design. The rounded edges and glass back make it a comfortable device to hold. The “Stardust Grey” color – a lightly shiny graphite shade – gives it a smart, low-key business look.
The frame on top has a mirror-like surface, while other parts are dull-polished to match the back case. The 6.8-inch punch-hole display looks frameless and is easy to control with one hand, considering its narrow width. And for a phone of this size, the X2 5 G’s weight is also acceptable – at 210.3 grams, slightly heavier than an iPhone 14 Pro.
The display performs well most of the time but can struggle when outdoors. Its peak brightness of 700 nits is not enough to see content in bright sunlight. There is an option in the settings that offer higher display brightness, but it consumes more power, and the phone might experience overheating.
The phone comes with the Android 12-based HiOS. The system runs smoothly and exceeds regular Android OS with rich built-in features and redesigned user interface.
The interface has a friendly color scheme and feels intuitive and accessible. The system provides a guide to help new users get familiar with the core features and system navigations.
There are also some well-designed widgets like Weather and To-dos. The negative home screen is replaced with a collection of widgets.
Another highlight is one can access Tecno’s purpose-built sidebar using the “back” swipe. It’s useful for accessing common functions and apps quickly, even if the default trigger is a bit too sensitive at times.
Built with MediaTek’s 2021-launched flagship chipset Dimensity 9000, the phone can cope easily with daily use and is well-equipped for most heavy workloads. We tested it with top gaming titles from Google Play, such as Apex Mobile, Asphalt 9, and Genshin Impact. Apex Mobile and Asphalt ran smoothly, but when we pushed it further by running demanding games like Genshin Impact, the phone experienced frame drops and overheating.
The phone offers only 8GB RAM, but what surprised us is that, even while playing games, the system manages to keep previously-opened apps running in the background.
For battery life and charging speed, the Phantom X2 5G is equipped with a large 5,160 mAh battery, meaning it can last all day with normal usage. But its 45-wattage charging speed falls well short of its premium market rivals, with other brands offering at least 60 W or even 200 W charging. With the charger coming in the box, it takes 90 minutes to fully charge from 20%. The phone also appears to use a private charging protocol, so when we connect it with a Power Delivery (PD) charger, the charging wattage is even lower.
The under-screen fingerprint recognition solution is appealing and easy to use, but it doesn’t always respond as quickly as expected, frustrating at times.
The Phantom X2 5G has a mixed camera performance. In some shooting scenarios, especially portrait mode, the results are stunning; yet the camera underperforms in full resolution mode, night mode, and can have some issues in color rendering.
The device has a triple camera system, with the main lens supporting a resolution of 64 million pixels. In regular mode, it can capture nice shots, but the full resolution – 64MP mode – is less ideal and pictures shot with this option can come out worse than ones taken in regular mode. The images do look larger than the low-resolution versions, but they would lack details.
The AI camera can recognize different scenarios most of the time, optimizing the images automatically. It can also combine different modes, for example, portraits with night or street view and HDR (high-dynamic range).
The night mode is a bit disappointing, with a long wait (around six seconds) and often a worse image result than the normal mode.
The camera also occasionally captures images with some color issues. Highlights and shadows sometimes come with color aberration. The issue saw a slight improvement after a system update.
The Phantom X2 5G is pricier than other mid-end phones. The nice design in the back case and frameless display make a great first impression. Its front camera, system UI, system optimization, and battery life all perform well, but its back cameras and charging speed could use some improvements.
Here are our major takeaways on the Phantom X2 5G:
Xiaomi sees slowing sales across all its main offerings, from smartphones, AIoT, and internet service, its third-quarter earnings report shows. The smartphone and electronics maker reported quarterly revenue of RMB 70.5 billion ($9.9 billion), a 9.7% yearly decline.
Why it matters: As electronics makers around the world navigate a market downturn, Xiaomi, the world’s third-largest phone maker, can provide investors and rivals some clues for the bumpy ride ahead.
Smartphone: Among the three sectors mentioned above, the smartphone business saw the largest yearly drop of 11.1%, shipping 8.8% fewer units in the third quarter, according to Counterpoint Research. Selling prices also saw a 2.2% quarterly decrease, averaging RMB 1,058 per unit.
IoT and lifestyle: Xiaomi’s IoT and lifestyle business had a 9% yearly revenue decrease and a 4% quarterly fall due to “weak consumer sentiment.” However, the firm posted a 39.5% increase in connected IoT devices year on year, reaching 558.3 million as of Sept. 30.
Internet services: Xiaomi’s internet service also performed flat, with a 3.7% yearly decrease but a slight 1.4% increase from the last quarter.
Context: Despite market pressure, the firm is committed to investing in research and development: Spending in this sector saw a 25.1% yearly increase in the third quarter of 2022. One successful example of such an investment is the development of the innovative 1-inch camera CMOS, co-worked with Sony. Xiaomi covered half of the $15 billion developing expense, according to Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun’s post on Weibo.
Major Chinese phone vendor Vivo launched its flagship series X90 on Tuesday for the home market, partnering with optical giant Zeiss for camera sensor and lenses.
Why it matters: The phone came with a 1-inch camera sensor, the latest phone vendor to do so since Sony introduced the new 1-inch CMOS camera sensor. Sharp and Xiaomi also adopted the large camera sensor in their high-end phones earlier this year. Phone makers are embracing this new trend of beefing up camera functions, indirectly replacing entry-level compact cameras.
Details: The X90 series contains three models: X90 Pro+ with Qualcomm’s flagship processor Snapdragon 8 Gen 2; X90 and X90 Pro with MediaTek’s high-end processor Dimensity 9200. Available in three colors, the series is priced between RMB 3,699 to RMB 6,999 ($517 to $979).
Context: Vivo took 9% of the global smartphone market in the second quarter of 2022 ranking fifth after Oppo, according to Counterpoint Research.
Foxconn’s facilities in the Chinese city of Zhengzhou have made headlines around the world in recent weeks, as Covid outbreaks and control policies have hit the world’s largest iPhone assembly line. The city recorded 1,043 new Covid-19 cases on Tuesday, according to public data revealed by the local government, and at the time of writing, much of Foxconn’s operations in the city remain under strict control. The disruption has led many to predict stock shortages and longer delivery times for iPhone models in the near future.
Foxconn is Apple’s biggest iPhone assembler, accounting for 70% of global iPhone shipments. iPhone production accounts for 45% of Foxconn’s revenue, according to analysts from Fubon Research.
The affected Foxconn plant has 200,000 workers, and more than 10% of global iPhone production capacity is currently impacted by the Zhengzhou Covid outbreak, according to Ming-Chi Kuo, an analyst for TF International Securities.
The incident could be the catalyst that pushes Apple to move more production from mainland China to other regions such as India to reduce uncertainty and supply line dependency. According to Kuo, Foxconn will speed up its expansion of production capacity in India for the iPhone in the wake of the Zhengzhou Foxconn lockdown. He predicted that India-produced iPhones will increase more than 150% yearly in 2023 and that the share of global iPhone production in the country will increase sharply, from 2%-4% to 40%-45% in the next few years.
Below, TechNode summarizes the primary moments surrounding the Zhengzhou Foxconn lockdown since late October.
Oct. 26 – Covid cases detected at Zhengzhou Foxconn
Oct. 28 – Closed-loop policy enacted as workers flee
Oct. 30 – Local government responds; analyst projects decline in iPhone production
Nov. 1 – Foxconn increases salaries to steady production
Nov. 3 – Zhengzhou government forms unit to help Foxconn workers
Nov. 6 – Apple warns of iPhone production decline
Nov. 7 – Foxconn hires hourly paid workers
Chinese telecom giant Huawei introduced the Pocket S, a budget flip-style foldable phone, on Wednesday in China. The phone has a lower price range compared to other foldable phones, priced between RMB 5,988 and RMB 7,488 ($819 to $1,025).
Why it matters: Huawei has so far dominated the foldable phone market in China. The new Pocket S further lowers the entry price for a foldable phone, making it a strong rival to the Samsung Z Flip series.
Details: The Huawei Pocket S is a cheaper version of the Pocket P50, sharing a similar core experience but compromising on key specs like the processor and cameras.
Context: Foldable phone shipments in China saw a sharp yearly increase of 246% in the third quarter of 2022 to 1 million units. Huawei is the top foldable phone vendor in China, and shipped 44.9% (in Chinese) of the units in the country in the third quarter of 2022, according to IDC.
HHOGene, a new consumer electronics brand founded by the former CEO of Alibaba’s DingTalk Chen Hang, launched its first product GPods, an earbud that can beam lights, and have raised more than $120,000 on an Indiegogo campaign earlier this year.
The GPods come with innovative light effects that are customizable, a unique selling point. It also has a comfortable wearing experience and decent sound quality in its price range. With a flashy light feature, the product targets fashion followers and music lovers that prefer something different.
HHOGene GPods will be first available from Nov. 1 in the US, priced at $169. The brand offers four extra earbud casings to allow users to customize its light textures.
The body design of the earbuds looks plain, but when you turn it on, its eye-catching light effects set it apart from other true wireless stereos (TWS).
The whole outer side of the “handle” parts of both earbuds can glow. The casing on the lights is well-processed to create a foggy effect, making the light look soft and elegant. HHOGene also offers detachable casings to help users switch from different textures.
The light effects are customizable via a paired app, which has a neat and user-friendly UI and offers a variety of color pattern presets to choose from. Users can also generate customized patterns from photos. There’s even an option to make the earbuds glow with a color that matches one’s clothes.
The earbuds can also glow in sync with the rhythm of the song being played over them, with four modes for users to choose from – Ripple, Pulse, Bright, and Breath.
One can adjust brightness. However, the maximum brightness is still not enough, meaning the effect can be lost in bright daylight.
HHOGene has done a good job in comfort. It’s less noticeable in the ears, thanks to its lightweight design (5.7 g per earbud) and comfortable tips. It remained a comfortable and snug fit after hours of wearing. However, the actual experience could naturally vary due to people’s different ear shapes.
The earbuds also offer controls on the handles. One can set different functions, such as skipping songs, pausing play, and answering phone calls, for gestures including single, double, or triple taps, and long presses for each side separately.
GPods surprised us with its sound quality. The buds offers a clear and balanced tone and do a good job of capturing the details of music: high frequency is bright; the bass is solid and strong but not overwhelming. It don’t offer an intense, sometimes tiring listening experience as some of the other mainstream options in the market.
A special point lies in its presentation of the human voice, which feels especially close to our ears.
For the hardware specs, HHOGene GPods adopt a processor named BES2500 from Chinese firm Bestechnic, which is also used in Oppo and Huawei’s TWS products. They feature a mainstream Bluetooth 5.2 version, with AAC and SBC supports.
The potential of the earbuds’ sound quality is limited by its audio codec. It’s particularly telling when connecting to an Android device, as most of them have aptX codec, delivering higher-quality sound than the AAC codec, which GPods use. iPhone users don’t have such concerns as the devices only support AAC.
HHOGene Pods support active noise cancellation (ANC) and have a transparent mode like rival TWS in a similar price range. However, the feature is lackluster.
One can tell the difference when turning the ANC feature on, but it’s far from satisfying. Another drawback is the background noise. One can hear weak white noise, like current pulses, when listening at certain low volumes. For people who prioritize ANC features in earbuds, there are better options in the market.
Given the issues with this feature, it might be a better idea to simply turn it off and save an extra hour of battery life. The buds offer up to five hours with one charge, and 20 hours with the case.
Users can see the battery percentage of both earbuds and the charging case from their app. The app has also been optimized for Apple devices so that you can view the earbuds’ battery status on iOS’s widgets.
The earbuds have a relatively larger charging case in terms of body size. With the largest side facing up, the HHOGene Pods case is almost twice the size of that the Apple Airpods Pro in thickness. For people who are used to putting charging cases in their pockets, this may feel chunky.
In summary, the HHOGene Pods is an impressive design. There are numerous TWS products that have hit the market in recent years but we rarely see something that introduces new designs while also offering a reasonable price and good sound quality.
Here are our main takeaways:
Correction: An earlier version of this article mistakenly said the brightness of the earbuds is unadjustable.
]]>Singles Day, China’s biggest year-end shopping event, kicked off its pre-sale period across platforms on Monday. Sales data from e-commerce giant JD, a platform known for consumer electronic offerings, showed sizable growth in consumer electronic sales.
Why it matters: Although JD’s sales data showed growth, the data still suggests some cause for cautious optimism as the platform only revealed the percentage change in sales – not the exact number of units sold. This year’s Singles Day comes amid a backdrop of a global slowdown in consumer electronics due to weak demand, especially for smartphones and PCs. Brands are hoping that the mega e-commerce event can offset some of the losses in recent months.
Details: Within the first second of Monday’s shopping event, smartphone sales from Apple, Xiaomi, Honor, and iQOO hit RMB 100 million ($13.76 million) cumulatively on JD, according to data from the platform. Oppo, Vivo, Samsung, OnePlus, Motorola, and Meizu saw 100% growth in sales in the first ten minutes compared with the same period last year. Foldable phones also had a 400% yearly growth in sales within the first ten minutes of the promotion. High-end gaming laptops equipped with a display with over 2k resolution and ultra-light laptops saw smaller 70% yearly growth in sales within the first ten minutes.
Context: Major e-commerce giants Alibaba and JD have started their yearly Singles Day shopping event with a major promotion of RMB 50 discounts for every RMB 300 spent.
Chip manufacturer TSMC sees a declining utilization in 6nm and 7nm processes as people buy fewer smartphones and PCs amid a global economic slowdown. It expects to cut utilization of certain chips in the next three quarters.
Why it matters: The market downturn will not see a recovery in the next six to nine months due to the “gloomy economic outlook,” according to market analysis firm Canalys. Chip contractors like TSMC, which had a high capacity utilization rate, now face vacancies in certain tech nodes.
Details: TSMC released its financial results for the third quarter of this year on Oct. 13 and gave conservative guidance of 0.4% quarterly revenue growth for the next quarter. The company also said its 6nm and 7nm production could remain affected until next year.
Context: TSMC is a top chipmaker worldwide, dominating 56% of the market by revenue in the second quarter of this year, according to Counterpoint. The chipmaker generated a revenue of $20.23 billion for the third quarter this year, a yearly growth rate of 35.9%.
Chinese phone maker Oppo released its new generation of smartwatches, the Watch 3 series, in August with a price tag of RMB 1,599 – RMB 2,099 ($228 – $300). The company first entered the watch market in 2020 and updated it annually.
The latest series has a new look and offer more premium features such as long battery life, and always-on feature supported by LTPO OLED display.
The version we tested, the Watch 3 Pro, is currently only available in mainland China and Oppo has yet to reveal any plans regarding overseas markets, but there is an expectation that it will eventually be sold internationally.
The first thing that impressed us about Oppo’s new Watch 3 Pro is the massive 48.5 mm curved display. It offers more space to display content than most of its Android rivals. Apple’s newly released Apple Watch Ultra comes with a 49 mm display but is more than doubled the price of Oppo’s offering.
The larger display enables the watch to showcase more information and users can track more metrics at the same time. An innovative change is the watch’s curved display, which fits better with one’s wrist and offers a clearer view when checking the watch from different angles.
Another good touch of the watch is the mechanical rotating crown on the side. It offers another tangible way to interact with the watch, considering slides on the touch screen may sometimes block the display of other content. The crown also stimulates realistic mechanical vibration feedback when spinning.
The watch’s large size leads to a heavier weight of 37.5 g (without bands), – a thing to adjust for those who are used to a more lightweight watch.
The black model we reviewed came with a classic-looking black rubber strap. The band is fastened through steps rather than being completely adjustable, which leaves it open to the possibility of being either too loose or too tight if your wrist doesn’t match up with the fixed steps.
The rubber material is waterproof (potentially making it a good companion for swimmers) and is also easy to clean. But for all-day use, we would recommend getting a nylon or Milanese strap, which fits more wrist sizes and has better breathability. If you want a more stylish look, the silver version with a leather strap could also be a better choice.
The system interface has a decent design, with good readability and accessibility. The font size and weight are well chosen, while essential information is marked with vivid colors. The transitional animation is quick and clean.
With a swipe of the home screen, the watch can access all essential secondary interfaces, like essential health metrics, widgets, quick setting toggles, and notifications, similar to a phone’s swipe-up feature.
The watch we reviewed was installed with ColorOS, and given its marketing to the Chinese market, it did not support Google Play or any other WearOS features. It provided over 80 apps through the built-in app store, covering the most common Chinese apps such as WeChat and Alipay. This means that if you enable the e-SIM feature, you can leave your phone at home and have access to the most essential software.
And just like other smartwatches, you can receive notifications and calls, monitor sleep stages, and conduct a quick electrocardiogram (ECG) test. However, the ECG app, for now, says “coming soon.”
When doing intense workouts, the weight of the watch and its slightly rigid watch band take some getting used to.
Despite that, the Watch 3 Pro has the potential to be a great exercise companion tool. Oppo sets four goals for users to hit, displaying these as four loops: steps, calories, workout, and activity. We found it a little harder to achieve the default goals, but one can adjust them to meet your needs.
The device can auto-detect six kinds of workout, including running, walking, cycling, swimming, elliptical machine work, and rowing machine activity. We tested walking and cycling and it had no problem detecting the former, but somehow missed the latter so we had to manually record the workout from the health app instead.
When it comes to manually recording, the watch offers dozens of types of workouts to choose from, with some featuring detailed subcategories. Dance, for example, has ten different styles, including waltz, street, and jazz. While this enables fitness enthusiasts to track their niche interests, it can feel daunting to new dancers. It also lacks a more general choice to record less common or freestyle workouts.
The recorded workout generally offers information about GPS mapping, duration, burnt calories, heart rate, etc. It even highlights different heart rate zones, helping users understand how close to their maximum heart rate a certain activity is getting them; for example, zone one is “warmup” and zone two is “fat burn.”
The Oppo Watch 3 Pro’s battery life is impressive. Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon W5+ Gen 1 processor provides higher performance and halves the amount of power consumption compared with the last generation. It has a large 550 mAh battery, even bigger than Apple Watch Ultra’s battery volume, according to iFixit.
We turned almost all features on, including the always-on-display, all-day heart rate and blood oxygen monitoring, and workout auto-detect, to drain its power as soon as possible. We also paired it with a phone that was installed with dozens of news and social media apps, sending a plethora of notifications to ensure that the watch display has a longer illuminated period. Despite all this, the watch managed to last three days without charging. For regular usage, the battery should last a few more days.
With its charging stand, the watch can be fully charged in around an hour.
What surprised us is that Oppo adopted a universal design for its charging stand: you can plug in any USB Type-C cable and supported charger to power it. Helping travelers to carry one less cable.
Another neat feature is that the stand uses magnets to connect with the watch, charging through contactors. Compared with wireless charging, it can reduce overheating issues, but the contact points could also age from oxidation and corrosion.
The Oppo Watch 3 Pro has a classic design, a large display, long battery life, and a solid core experience. There is room for improvement, such as a more comfortable strap and weight reduction, but overall it is a reasonably priced high-end Android smartwatch.
The upcoming overseas version should come with the full suite of Google offerings. We would recommend this watch to Android users with a larger wrist size, especially those who own an Oppo phone and can therefore unlock features across devices. For Apple users, it can still provide core smartwatch features and comes with a cheaper price tag than an Apple Watch.
Here is our summary:
Chinese phone vendor Vivo launched its second generation foldable phone, the X Fold+, in China at a release event on Monday night, with a price tag of RMB 9,999 – RMB 10,999 ($1,396 – $1,536).
Why it matters: Vivo’s new foldable phone uses a new high-end processor the Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1, following its rivals like Motorola, Xiaomi, Samsung, and Huawei. The phone maker’s market campaign focused on attracting consumers who prefer a stronger camera system and dual-fingerprint recognition (on both internal and external displays).
Details: The Vivo X Fold+, compared to its predecessor, has similar specs in terms of body size, case design, weight, display, and cameras. But the new generation is equipped with a new processor, better charging speed, and an improved battery.
Context: Vivo has so far focused on selling foldable phones in China, it has yet to launch any foldable phones overseas, nor has it revealed any plans to do so.
TikTok owner ByteDance bolstered its lineup of VR headsets on Thursday by unveiling the new Pico 4 and 4 Pro as strong alternatives to the Meta Oculus, with prices starting from 429 euros ($421.79).
Why it matters: The Chinese tech giant is clearly eyeing the VR market, and this is its first VR product since acquiring the Beijing-based firm Pico last year for RMB 9 billion ($1.27 billion).
Details: The Pico 4 will be available in Japan, South Korea, and 13 European countries, including the UK, France, Germany, and Spain, shipping from October 18. And it will come to China, Singapore, and Malaysia later this year. A US release has not been announced.
Context: Founded in March 2015, Pico is a major VR hardware and services vendor. In addition to its products for the consumer market, it also provides services for enterprise clients in the fields of education and healthcare.
Major Chinese phone vendor Vivo launched its new V25 Pro overseas last month, targeting mid-end markets. Launched in 2015 with the V1, the V series is a product line exclusive to overseas regions. The V25 series is priced from $310 to $550 and sell in more than 20 markets across Southeast Asia, South Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, and others.
The new phone has powerful cameras and a unique light-changing design on the body case. Its core performance specs are also enough for daily use. Yet there are notable shortcomings with its system user interface design and gaming performance. It’s a phone for people who prioritize good camera functions, but may not be ideal for an avid gamer on the same budget, which Xiaomi’s Redmi and Realme might have more competitive offers.
The V25 Pro’s back case has a shiny effect courtesy of its processed glass material. It reflects light in a “bling-bling” way. According to Vivo, the phone adopts a color-changing technique that alters its color after exposure to sunlight or ultraviolet (UV) rays for ten minutes. The function offers users a way to customize the back case by blocking the light with stickers. The parts exposed to light will present a deeper blue, while the rest remains in the original light blue like a watermark. The eye-catching effect is temporary and disappears within minutes depending on the lighting conditions. Vivo also didn’t provide stickers or other tools to help with such customization.
The phone’s camera area in the back is well-designed, with lenses less prominent than rivals. Also, the phone adopts the popular dual-curved design, which gives it a great visual impact and makes for a good holding experience.
The Vivo V25 Pro’s cameras are among its most impressive features. The phone is equipped with triple back cameras: a 64 million pixel ultra-sensing camera, an 8 million pixel super wide-angle camera, and a 2 million pixel macro camera. The ultra-wide and macro cameras have much lower resolutions than the main one.
The cameras can capture realistic tones and deliver a natural look without being too plain.
It doesn’t over-process pictures, like up saturation and contrast levels for a more vivid and digitally sharpened look. The phone’s algorithm shows a preference for restricting highlights to keep more detail, offering a well-balanced tone. This could be a differentiator for users wanting a more realistic rendering.
The cameras also perform well in low light, capturing pictures fast and preserving details, thanks to its algorithms and optical image stabilization tech. The phone also comes with rich features for vlogging, such as dual view and fast autofocus.
The phone comes with Funtouch 12, an Android-based system. But Vivo’s customization of this UI has a dated feel and is a bit disappointing.
Most phone brands design their own home widgets like clocks, weather, and calendar. The system’s icon designs lack contrast in color and pattern, making it hard to distinguish their functions, while the names lack shadows and darkening effects to stand out from the wallpaper sometimes.
Vivo’s theme store can upgrade the looks but will cost money.
Built with a mid-end processor, MediaTech Dimensity 1300, and 12 GB RAM (plus eight RAM more offered by software), the phone can handle most daily tasks with ease.
We attempt to open as many apps as possible from the Google Play store and find the phone can handle over 20 frequently used apps running in the background and can resume any of them in an instant. Due to its high-speed UFS 3.1 storage chip, the phone is also fast when opening new apps.
The phone can handle playing casual game titles that demand less performance, with no overheating or frame-dropping issues. But with a 6nm mid-end processor, don’t expect the phone to handle heavy work for extended periods.
When we played the demanding open-world game Genshin Impact with the highest setting, the CPU temperature reading from popular benchmark app Antutu shot up from 40 degrees Celsius to almost 80 degrees Celsius. The frame stability was fine, but the display emitted a lot of heat, which makes it uncomfortable to hold while playing.
Battery and charging performance is enough for daily use, too. The Vivo V25 Pro has a 4830 mAh battery with 66 W maximum charging wattage. We tested it with 20% battery life remaining, and within the first 10 minutes, it had charged to 47%. The phone took another 35 minutes to be fully charged, not as fast but still at an acceptable speed.
The battery can last reasonably long if you don’t push it too much. In the Genshin Impact testing, 50% of the battery life was gone in just two hours of gameplay. But left alone, with no heavy apps running, and the phone’s battery could last for more than two days.
The Vivo V25 Pro is a good budget choice as a primary phone for daily use. It has a large battery to support all-day use, considerable RAM for heavy multitasking, and good cameras that deliver realistic shots. And yes, it has a unique back case that can change color for a short period.
But it struggles to handle high-performance game titles, and some may find the system UI uninspiring. For people looking for higher performance within the same budget, the phone faces some serious competitors.
Here’s our main takeaways on the phone:
]]>READ MORE: Honor 70 review: a mid-end phone with style
Chinese telecom giant Huawei introduced its new high-end Mate 50 phone series at a Tuesday product release event. The series features camera and glass upgrades and supports satellite texting.
Why it matters: Huawei’s new lineup offers several surprising features, with a notable breakthrough in cameras and satellite communication.
Details: Huawei’s new Mate 50 lineup is priced from RMB 3,999 to RMB 12,999 ($573.53 to $1,864.3), covering a wide market range. The Mate 50 standard, Pro, and the luxury RS model (with a Porsche-inspired design) are built with the newest high-end processor, Qualcomm Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 4G. The lowest-priced Mate 50E model comes with a mid-end processor, Qualcomm Snapdragon 778G 4G. The standard, Pro, and E models have 8 GB RAM, while the RS model has 12 GB RAM.
Context: Huawei is the fourth largest mobile vendor after Xiaomi, accounting for 6.03% of the global smartphone market as of August 2022, according to StatCounter, an analysis website started in 1999.
Chinese phone maker Honor released the Honor 70 for the overseas market on Saturday at Internationale Funkausstellung Berlin (IFA) 2022, an industry exhibition in Germany. The model was first launched in China earlier this year and was the best seller in mid-priced phones during the 618 shopping holiday, according to Honor.
Honor 70 is a primary product line with a mid-range price tag and specs, compared to its high-end Magic series and lower-priced X series.
For the review, TechNode is testing the Honor 70 Crystal Silver with 8 GB RAM and a Qualcomm Snapdragon 778G Plus processor.
The phone is targeted at users who have a tight budget but a preference for stylish design. It offers solid performance in terms of core specs and surprised us a little in some aspects.
The phone adopts dual-curved edges on the display with a frame in the middle, which makes it feel frameless.
The crystal silver colorway we have has a crystal-like back case. The base color is mixed with sparkly “stardust” with a gradient from the top to the bottom. Using a faceted design usually seen in diamonds and other jewelry, the case reflects surrounding light while still giving a comfortable holding experience.
In keeping with the sleek design, the back cameras are contained within two circles: one with two cameras and the other with one camera and a flash. The black surface of the two circles also contrasts pleasingly with the silvery back of the phone.
We are pleasantly surprised by the phone’s stylish user interface. The wallpaper corresponds with the phone’s body color, the icons are well-designed, and the widgets (clock, calendar, weather, and search bar) are composed in a comfortable and appealing way.
The interface uses vivid but not overtly bright color while incorporating smooth and natural motion and transition animations. In some cases, such as shutting down background apps, the animations are even a little playful, like giving out a flipping motion. The phone’s high refresh rate of 120 HZ display works well with the system animation, leveling up the user experience compared to previous models.
From the look of the spec, Honor 70’s 8 GB RAM and a mid-end processor, the Qualcomm Snapdragon 778G Plus, the phone may not seem built to handle heavy work such as playing games that consume a lot of memories and put pressure on processors. But after trying it with a few different types of games, the phone responds relatively well.
We started by trying out casual games like Subway Surfers, an endless runner game. The phone runs quite well without dropping any frames and we barely feel any heat from the device.
We then push it further by running the demanding roleplaying game Genshin Impact. When it runs this title, the system kills almost all other background apps, with its 8 RAM creating a bottleneck. And with the highest graphic preset of 60 fps option on, it runs smoothly most of the time, but it does drop frames when loading complex scenes or if you move your character quickly around the game.
Meanwhile, playing Genshin Impact on the phone sees the CPU temperature rise from 30 to 47 degrees Celsius, according to a reading from Antutu, a popular Chinese phone benchmark app.
That temperature may seem acceptable, but we felt it was a bit too hot to hold when playing games in summer. For such memory-consuming game titles that may push the processor to its limits, you could consider lowering the graphic settings for a better experience.
The phone can handle ambitious tasks, but our advice is to not push it too hard. As for everyday apps, the specs are more than enough. The phone’s 8 GB RAM (plus 2 GB extra offered by an effective feature allowing storage to be added to RAM) can run more than 10 lightweight apps in the background at the same time.
The Honor 70 has a triple back camera module and single front camera, with rich and playful features for vlogging and shooting. Two of the back cameras support 50 million-plus pixel resolution.
We took it out for some shots and the camera did a good job, capturing some nice colors and proper exposure even in complex scenes with large shadows.
Lowlight scenarios are challenging for phone cameras due to the tiny size of the sensor which directly determines the image quality. We test the Honor 70 in a darkened art gallery and the phone does quite well, capturing detailed images, with a good balance of highlights and shadows; the white balance is accurate most of the time. The camera also has a night mode and a Macro feature.
Its Aperture Mode, which can create partially-blurred bokeh images, works well. Shots with this mode may not look as flawless as true optical bokeh driven by a larger sensor and aperture, but this mode nevertheless exceeds our expectations of what a phone camera can do.
A highlight feature is Multi-Videos, which offers a great filming experience for vloggers and e-commerce livestreamers when looking to demonstrate an item or experience. It allows you to use both the front and back cameras at the same time and display the image in a split screen. It can quickly catch and focus on the main subject with options to adjust the zoom and beautify the image.
The Honor 70 adopts a 6.67-inch punch-hold OLED display, with 2400 x 1080 resolution. The display works nicely when we test it with HDR video samples. This mode shows off the benefits of the phone’s OLED display which offers great contrast and definite black without lighting up the pixels.
The device tends to display colors in a cooler tone if you compare its display with that of other phones or juxtapose it with a white wall. You may get used to it after a long time using it, but it could make you feel slightly uncomfortable if you use multiple devices at the same time.
The model we tried had a 4,800 mAh battery, supporting 66 W charging with the charger that comes with the device. The battery life won’t be a concern if you don’t overburden it. The 66 W charging speed is another compromise, as many other similarly priced phones in China now offer 150 W or even 200 W high-speed charging speed.
However, for the average user, the 66 W charging speed should be plenty: it can still fully charge this phone up from 20% in less than 40 minutes.
The Honor 70 is a stylish choice for vloggers and fashionistas on a tight budget. Its core specs can support everyday apps quite well and even deliver in some demanding scenarios.
However, it does have certain compromises as a mid-end model, in particular with regards to its display, charging speed, and cameras.
Even so, we are still impressed by its rich camera features and elegant design, including both the body and the user interface. In short, here are our major takeaways:
Major Chinese phone vendor Oppo released ColorOS 13 in China, an operating system for phones made by Oppo and its sister brands OnePlus and Realme, at the 2022 Oppo Developer Conference (ODC) on Tuesday, following the announcement of the overseas version on August 18.
ColorOS 13 is based on Android 13, an open-source project led by Google. It inherits the original Android security pitches and bottom optimization but also introduces special features and localization through partnering with local firms. One particularly notable feature – Pantanal – allows for better collaboration between devices by offering a closer connection and reallocating resources.
Here are the key updates worth checking out.
A major update – with version numbers increasing in integers comparable to iOS 15 to 16 – generally means a fresh look in the new system’s user interface (UI). In the past year, Apple and Google haven’t introduced any major UI redesigns for Android 13 and iOS 16, so Oppo’s visual update makes it stand out among its rivals.
ColorOS 13 introduces a new UI design style called “Aquamorphic Design.” The update is inspired by the concept of water, aiming to create “a fluid, vibrant, and inclusive UI” from animation to component design. The colors and patterns are also based on the changing light between sunrise and sunset by the sea.
The new system has a card-style composition for increased accessibility, which looks cleaner and more friendly to use. Also contributing to the fresh feel, Oppo has launched a new font with a wider face that is easier to read. The new OS also introduces adaptive layouts optimized for devices in different size and statuses such as foldable phones and tablets.
Android’s background app running strategies left it a historical issue of how to allocate resources, including CPU time and RAM. Oppo is trying to further optimize system fluency by scheduling computing and RAM resources, prioritizing important tasks, and limiting greedy apps from running in the background via its algorithms to achieve a better balance between performance and power consumption.
It does this through its “Dynamic Computing Engine,” a system-level piece of technology formed from four computing engines that can increase battery life by 4.7% and performance by 10%, according to Oppo’s announcements at the event. The OS also aims to maintain more apps running in the background so that users can switch between them without a reboot or long wait.
As part of the new ColorOS, Oppo also revealed Pantanal, a cross-platform system which explores how to break the boundary between devices for better collaboration. The system can keep users in the loop of schedules on other devices via information from multiple devices such as enhanced Google Glance and Siri Advice. For example, it can remind users of a booked flight or the status of a coming taxi on multiple devices. Oppo has partnered with notable Chinese firms such as Li Auto, Tencent, Alipay, and Xiaohongshu for easier cross-device collaboration with Pantanal.
What really distinguishes Pantanal, however, is that the platform can not only handle data and information, but can also allocate computation and algorithm resources from multiple devices, including vehicles, phones, and tablets, to handle tasks like video creation.
It also extends connectivity to vehicles, offering more immersive in-car experiences such as using multiple car cameras to start video phone calls or running phone apps through the central vehicle console. Oppo has announced a partnership with Chinese automaker SAIC Motor as part of its moves into vehicle connectivity.
For privacy and safety, ColorOS 13 comes with a feature that can erase sensitive information on a screenshot from chat apps like WhatsApp and Messenger. It also has a function to prevent unsafe apps from running, like Google Play Protection, using algorithms assisted by real humans.
ColorOS also includes an animation emoji feature called Omoji, similar to Apple’s Memoji, with a style that echoes the new UI. Users can create their own avatars, which can then be used to present or livestream in certain apps.
The update also features a new Meeting Assistant function for online meetings. The assistant can prioritize wireless data packages to provide a more stable connection, and enables users to capture text from the screen to make notes. It can also convert forms from the screen to common files like Excel sheets or PPT slides.
ColorOS 13 is now accessible via a beta program and will officially roll out to over 40 models this year, including OnePlus phones in China.
The new OS is one of the major phone operating systems in China, competing with Xiaomi’s MiUI and Huawei’s Harmony OS. The system sees major updates every year that typically follow Google’s original Android version for its Pixel phones. According to Oppo, the system has reached 500 million monthly active users globally.
]]>Xiaomi launched the 12S Pro in China in early July. The phone is the mid-range offering in Xiaomi’s new 12S lineup (including the 12S, 12S Pro, and 12S Ultra), which updates annually and targets a broad range of mid-end to high-end users. The series is also the first Xiaomi phones to use Leica lenses. TechNode got a hold of the 12S Pro and spent a week using and testing it. Below are our thoughts on the phone.
The phone can be a solid choice as a primary daily device. The Leica-branded cameras can lure photography lovers, and the 12S Pro’s specs offer a quality entertainment experience. We would also recommend it to avid gamers and video watchers.
Xiaomi 12S Pro has curved edges from the back case to the front display, with a metal frame in the middle. The model has a higher width-to-height ratio, narrow enough to hold with one hand. The curved edges help reduce discomfort.
The back case is made of delicately frosted glasses, which, in combination with the white color, will be free from fingerprints.
The phone runs on Qualcomm’s latest flagship processor, Snapdragon 8 Gen 1+, and its power excels.
We played Genshin Impact, a detailed sandbox mobile game known for demanding high device specs, and it ran quite smoothly on the device under the highest graphic preset. After almost two hours of gameplay, it rarely dropped frames, and the phone temperature remained relatively consistent, with the back case feeling a little heated. Antutu, a popular Chinese benchmark app, reads around 36 degrees Celsius of CPU without workload and up to 50 degrees Celsius after two hours of Genshin Impact gameplay. The metal frame lets out more heat than the back case. We would describe it as “warm” rather than “burning.”
The phone has a 6.73-inch punch-hole display with 3200 x 1440 pixels. It also comes with a high 120 Hz refresh rate. A highlight we enjoy is the phone’s 20:9 display ratio. The phone offers a better experience for watching videos, considering most popular films display at around a 21:9 ratio.
The display can also achieve a 1,500-nit peak and a 1,000-nit general maximum brightness. A benefit lies in the outdoors experience with this phone, especially in bright, sunny environments. We tested it in such bright lighting conditions, and it offers decent display quality – the color looks normal, and the phone didn’t overheat when operating with the display set to maximum brightness.
The phone can also handle 4K HDR videos quite well in high-contrast scenes, showing details in both shadows and highlights. The dual speaker with Dolby Atom enhances the entertainment experience even further.
A key highlight of the phone is its Leica lens and software. The phone comes with various Leica color profiles. In Photo mode, there are two default options: Leica Authentic and Leica Vibrant. Both modes offer a sharp, vivid look. The colors are punchy yet not too overwhelming, keeping much of the detail in the dark and highlighted areas.
There are two additional monochromatic Leica profiles listed in the filters tab. The high contrast one – Leica HC – provides the distinctive black and white look that Leica is known for. If you are a fan of black and white photography and perhaps a fan of Japanese street photographer Daido Moriyama’s work, this would be a fun filter to explore.
When it comes to the portrait mode on the rear camera, however, Xiaomi 12S Pro’s algorithm-driven bokeh falls short. It couldn’t always recognize the edge of many subjects, including human hair and other complex scenes. Therefore, we recommend shooting at a lower aperture to improve this issue.
The phone has three rear cameras, offering a range from teleport to ultrawide with five times optical and 20 times digital zoom capacity. We shot in different zoom ranges from a single perspective to demo how it works.
We use the main rear camera to do a standard test of its optical performance in a 16:9 frame to put some extra pressure on the lenses. A notable takeaway is the slight chromatic aberration that appears in high contrast areas. But overall, the image is quite sharp from the center to the corners.
The front camera takes good quality shots most of the time and comes with a built-in beautification feature to offer choices, making you look better in pictures. However, the phone’s algorithm tends to overexpose when using the front camera, losing details in the highlights. After upgrading the system, the issue improved a little so it could be more of a preset preference issue rather than a bug.
The phone is equipped with a 4600 mAh large battery, with 120 W speed charge support. Battery life is not a concern for daily use, and we were surprised by the efficiency of the fast charging feature.
Furthermore, the phone’s battery holds up in demanding situations. For example, after two and a half hours of demanding gaming in the highest image quality, with 75% display brightness and Wi-Fi on, the battery went down 34%. Streaming a movie for two and a half hours using the same settings consumed 25% battery life.
Under these conditions, the phone should theoretically give you over seven hours of demanding gameplay and 10 hours of streaming video playback.
When it comes to charging, the 12S Pro took only 4 minutes to charge from 20% to 40%. From 20% to full, it only took 23 minutes using the 120 W charger that comes in the box, if you close all apps. The phone lets out surprisingly little heat during the charging process, which is impressive because such a high wattage charging speed will generally lead to overheating.
The phone’s large 12 GB RAM is a plus to the processor. We opened 20 apps, including news apps, social apps, and Chrome, and all work seamlessly in the background.
The phone system will automatically kill some inactive apps to save battery when you open power-intensive apps or games or lock the phone. But you can easily resume any previously opened app without much delay, thanks to its powerful processing and high-speed storage chips.
As a premium Android phone, Xiaomi 12S Pro has a low-key design and feels good in the hands. The performance, battery life, and charging capacity are more than enough for daily usage. You can play popular game titles like Diablo Immortal and Genshin Impact in the best image quality without experiencing frame drops. The new Leica camera system also performs well most of the time.
It should be a phone that fits the bill for most Android users for daily use. Below, TechNode summarized the main advantages and drawbacks of the Xiaomi 12S Pro.
Regional authorities in China’s central province of Sichuan said they will cut power supply to industrial factories for six days as the region suffers from heatwaves unseen in 60 years. The province saw a 25% surge in power consumption this year.
Why it matters: More than a dozen notable electronics and semiconductor manufacturing firms, including BOE, Foxconn, CATL, and Texas Instruments, have factories in Sichuan. The power cut will directly impact their production, affecting downstream firms like Apple, Tesla, and Nio.
Details: The power cut will go into effect from Monday to Saturday, with all factories in the 19 cities of Sichuan province asked to suspend production, including those listed on the so-called “protected whitelist.” But the level of impact seems to vary between companies.
Context: Sichuan is a top area for producing electronics in China’s midwestern region. It brought in RMB 1.5 trillion ($215.6 billion) in revenue in 2021, according to 21st Century Business Herald.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi revealed a new foldable smartphone, the Xiaomi Mix Fold 2, at a product launch event on Thursday, boasting a folded thickness that is close to that of a regular phone, thanks to its new screen and hinge design.
Why it matters: The Mix Fold 2 is also intended as a challenge to foldable phone giant Samsung, which launched its new Galaxy Z Fold 4 this week. Xiaomi’s model is cheaper, has a larger battery and screen, and a much faster charging speed.
Details: With a price range of RMB 8,999 to RMB11,699 ($1,336 to $1,736), the phone adopts an inner folding design with a 6.56-inch outer display and an 8.02-inch inner screen. Both displays support 120 Hz refresh rate, 1,000 nits maximal brightness, and Dolby Vision.
Context: Xiaomi introduced its Mix Fold 1 in early 2021, with the model becoming the seventh highest-selling foldable phone in the world in 2021, just behind Huawei’s Mate X2, according to a report from Omdia.
Oppo-owned phone brand OnePlus introduced OnePlus Ace Pro on Tuesday, the latest device in its gaming lineup. The new phone is a local Chinese version of the OnePlus 10T announced on August 3 for sale in overseas markets.
Why it matters: Chinese smartphone makers are introducing high-performance phones at lower prices. The cheapest phone with Qualcomm’s newest high-end chip was the Realme GT2 Master Explorer Edition, released in July, and the OnePlus now provides a much larger RAM with the same starting price of RMB 3,499 ($520).
Details: Built with Qualcomm Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 and unique cooling tech, the core performance can be promising for gamers, but the model also compromised other specs such as the display. Li Jie, president of OnePlus in China, said at the release event that the firm expects sales of its new Ace series to reach millions of units in China. For comparison, the brand’s number series sold 2.4 million units in China, 36Kr reported on Wednesday (in Chinese).
Context: The Ace series was a product line of Oppo. OnePlus took over this year and has since launched three models targeting gamers.
Chinese telecom giant Huawei introduced the latest version of its HarmonyOS, a system for various smart devices, on Wednesday. The new HarmonyOS 3 system supports 12 different device types as the firm ambitiously looks to build its own closed-off ecosystem like Apple’s.
Why it matters: HarmonyOS, a Huawei-developed system originating from open-source projects, has amassed 300 million users since its launch in 2019. The third generation comes with more powerful features that connect different devices with one system while adding new local services such as a ride-hailing app.
Details: A key highlight of Huawei’s new operating system is a significant update of its cross-device integration feature called “Super Terminal.” HarmonyOS 3 is already open for public testing and will see a full rollout in September.
Context: In April, Huawei changed the name of its Consumer Business unit to Terminal Business, aiming to expand its focus from customer-facing business to enterprise and government businesses. The new HarmonyOS, along with new devices built with it, is part of this push to better serve customers with a variety of Huawei devices.
Major Chinese electronics manufacturer Anker introduced a new series of gallium nitride (GaN) chargers called GaNPrime at a release event on Tuesday. The new lineup offers fast-charging tech with higher charging wattage (up to 150 watts) and greater energy efficiency.
Why it matters: As a pioneer in charging tech, Anker managed to pack more power in smaller and lighter chargers. Its new 737 model, for example, supports 120W charging wattage, but the size is equal to most 60W chargers offered by Anker’s competitors.
Details: The new GaNPrime series includes six products for the overseas market, with charging wattage ranging from 65W to 150W and multiple ports for multi-device charging.
Context: Founded in 2011, Anker is a major Chinese electronics company best known for its charging products. As a pioneer in the GaN charger field, Anker became the top brand in this market with the most sales worldwide in 2021, according to a survey from Frost & Sullivan, which was cited by the company at the release event.
]]>On Wednesday, the Indian government accused Chinese smartphone maker Oppo of evading 43.9 billion rupees ($550 million) in import taxes.
Why it matters: The incident is the latest development in the Indian government’s investigations into Chinese tech firms with operations in the country, including Xiaomi and Vivo, which all faced tax scrutiny from the local authority earlier this year.
Details: India’s anti-smuggling agency, the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI), has launched an investigation, searching and questioning members of Oppo’s local offices, according to a press release from the Indian Finance Ministry on Wednesday.
Context: In late May, India started probing the local units of two notable Chinese phone makers, ZTE and Vivo, for alleged financial improprieties, according to Bloomberg.
Oppo sister brand Realme launched a new high-spec phone, the Realme GT2 Master Explorer Edition, on Tuesday, at a relatively low price.
Why it matters: Oppo’s Realme is known for making phones with high spec combinations at a low price, similar to Xiaomi’s sub-brand, Redmi. The GT2 features Qualcomm’s latest processor and new RAM technology.
Details: Realme GT2 Master Explorer Edition is now the cheapest phone fitted with Qualcomm’s new processor, the Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1, a chip that higher-end Android phones tend to use. The phone sells 12.5% cheaper than three other phones that have used the chip, based on a calculation from TechNode.
Context: Top Chinese phone brands Xiaomi, Oppo, and Vivo, have all established sub-brands like Redmi and Realme, and iQOO to better serve targeted groups that are more price sensitive.
Nubia, a brand owned by Chinese telecom firm ZTE, upgraded its gaming phone series with the new Red Magic 7S and 7S Pro on Monday. The new models introduce one of the fastest gaming frame rates and a virtual host for streaming as the brand looks to establish itself as a high-end gaming phone maker.
Why it matters: In an effort to differentiate itself from other gaming phone makers, the new Red Magic models come with special tech to increase gaming frames per second to offer a smoother experience.
Details: The Red Magic 7S series’ gaming features are powered by Qualcomm’s latest high-end processor, the Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1, and Nubia worked with a partner to develop the Red Core 1 chip for additional display features. The standard version has up to 16GB RAM and 512 GB storage, while the Pro has options for 18 GB RAM and 1 TB storage.
Context: Nubia introduced the gaming phone series Red Magic in 2018, six years after the brand was first established.
Imagine a future scenario where patients don’t have to travel long distances or spend too much time talking to their doctors face-to-face, and where doctors can easily access their patients’ daily health data remotely, allowing patients, doctors, health plans and managers to remain seamlessly connected.
Now, consumer electronics makers and scientists are seeing new possibilities for utilizing these tools — smartphones, apps, smartwatches — to help people live healthier lives though digital health treatment and detect problems early on.
The growing trend of consumer digital health devices has contributed to the ongoing expansion of the digital health industry. The global digital health market recorded $145.57 billion in 2021, growing at a 16.9% compound annual growth rate from 2022 to 2028, according to US market research firm Vantage Market Research.
The booming industry empowered more consumers to use health tools to monitor their own health. The health devices go beyond just tracking one’s walking steps, monitoring heart rates and calorie burns during a workout, or counting one’s sleeping hours. The tools can bring in a lot more in the future, potentially helping more people access quality healthcare and prevent costly surgeries and treatment by diagnosing cardiovascular diseases, cancer, or other diseases early on. “Digital health is a cultural transformation that creates a new status quo, where the relationship between a doctor and a patient becomes an equal-level partnership,” said Dr. Bertalan Mesko, Director of The Medical Futurist Institute during an interview.
Dr. Timothy Weadon, Director of Hardware Engineering for Health from OPPO explained such trends to TechNode, saying, “One key aspect of change over the next five years will be bringing in clinically validated metrics and bridging the gap between some of the consumer device industry and some of the real medical industry.”
Weadon also believes that in the future, the telemedicine industry can be well promoted by consumer device companies with its high connectivity between the health data and digital health devices, and those devices will come in all forms, not just wearables. “I think that we’re going to start seeing more contactless care where you can have various monitors that follow your health metrics and quantify with you while having minimal interaction,” he added.
From May to August, OPPO Research Institute Innovation Accelerator calls for innovative proposals from around the world, running regional demo events in Israel and India to find the most promising health companies to work with. In its innovative program, OPPO has selected ten startup teams for the regional roadshow in Tel Aviv, Israel. The candidates’ research areas also reflect the trend of digital health. OPPO saw two companies bringing innovative ideas to personal healthcare through smart wearable devices and the ability to integrate data analytics: Facense and Docdok Health.
Launched in 2015, Facense is an Israeli company that develops smart glasses with head-mounted sensors for continuous signal measurement to monitor metrics like head movement, steps, skin temperature, and blood pressure for applications in diverse health and wellness. For instance, according to the firm’s roadshow slide, its smart glasses can detect potential Covid symptoms based on those sensors.
Docdok Health is a company that provides CE-certified software as a medical device app that delivers data-driven personalized healthcare. The firm has a three-step concept: connecting healthcare providers with their patients as a basis for personalized healthcare, compiling meaningful patient data and running smart analytics to grasp patients’ full picture, and applying the gained insights to improve patient outcomes.
Among the winning teams at the Israel roadshow, OPPO saw a more practical-focused firm, Social Mind, which provides AI and evidence-based interventions for parents with autistic children, transforming autism care with high quality and wide-reaching.
“Digital Health is new and emerging. It needs community effort and engagement with other startups as well as health institutions.” In addition to innovative ideas, Weadon said he’s also looking for teams that bring creative ideas with a passion. “I think a good team is not only a team that works hard or has a good direction, but they need to have passion and motivation. I think it’s really important that people work with passion to develop the next thing.”
OPPO is a strong advocate for proactive and preventive healthcare. It launched OPPO Research Institute Innovation Accelerator in May and has included digital health as one of the topics of the project, and the other is accessible technology, aiming to push the digitalization in health care, making health care services more personalized.
The company plans to achieve its preventive health goals by applying holistic design concepts to its digital health devices. “As an engineer, I think about things as a system,” said Weadon, “the point of the design is to have an impact to really enable and empower our users to have a better life and also to be able to go and enjoy the activities that they have and help them with those devices.”
When it comes to smartwatches, OPPO believes it’s about having real, accurate, clinically meaningful information and creating a full loop experience for users, so they can take that information and make decisions that lead to healthier lifestyles. And the firm builds its devices works in an invisible and nonintrusive way, hoping the users would set their devices and forget them.
]]>Chinese telecom giant Huawei is entering the ride-sharing market with the launch of a standalone car-hailing app “Petal Chuxing.” The company looks for ways to expand its car-related business and diversify revenue sources as sales of its smartphones slow.
Why it matters: Huawei’s foray into ride-hailing is a natural extension of the company’s ambition to become a key player in the automotive space as the autonomous ride-hailing service has the potential to make up a significant percentage of new car sales in the long run.
Details: Huawei launched a ride-sharing app called “Petal Chuxing,” based on its navigation app “Petal Maps,” which allows users to request rides from multiple ride-hailing providers, state media publication National Business Daily reported on Friday.
Context: Huawei first launched its proprietary mapping service for overseas users in October 2020, a year after US sanctions barred the company from including Google software and services on its devices. The service now has 28 million users from over 160 countries.
]]>READ MORE: Huawei begins selling EVs in stores, may offset sinking phone sales: CEO
Taiwan-based personal computer vendor Asus has teamed up with Tencent to release two new gaming phones aimed at professional mobile gamers. The phones, which go by the name ROG 6 and ROG 6 Pro, were announced on Tuesday, with price ranging from RMB 3,999 to RMB 7,999 ($597 to $1194).
Why it matters: Asus has used its brand, ROG (Republic of Gamers), to build a suite of professional gaming devices, such as laptops, phones, and desktops. The latest phone from Asus, the ROG 6, is backed by Tencent and offers deals for the gaming giant’s titles.
Details: Designed specifically for gaming, the ROG 6 and ROG 6 Pro models have been built with oversized specs, including a maximum of 18GB RAM. The two models have also been built with special designs and features that optimize them for gameplay.
Context: Launched in 2006, Asus’ ROG focuses on various gaming hardware, from laptops to separate components like motherboards. The brand has become established in communities of spec geeks (people who prioritize high-level performance and metrics in devices) and gamers on its quality and iconic illumination effects.
Aito, a Chinese electric vehicle brand backed by Huawei, received more than 10,000 pre-orders for the M7 in just two hours, after it was unveiled on Monday. The new model is the brand’s second production vehicle featuring Huawei’s HarmonyOS operating system for cars.
Why it matters: While reservations do not always translate into actual sales, the M7 has captured people’s attention, signaling that Huawei is turning into a serious rival to existing carmakers since entering the burgeoning EV space about one year ago.
Details: More than 10,000 people pre-ordered the Aito M7 sports utility vehicle in the first two hours after the car brand began accepting RMB 1,000 ($149) deposits on Monday afternoon, a company spokesman told TechNode on Tuesday.
Context: Huawei and its manufacturing partner Sokon have seen a steady increase in sales of the M5, their first vehicle under the Aito brand, shipping 7,021 crossovers in June, a 40% increase from a month earlier.
On Monday, Xiaomi introduced a new series of high-end smartphones, 12S, using Sony imaging sensors and Leica lenses. The premium 12S series models are priced from RMB 3,999 to RMB 6,999 ($598 to $1046).
Why it matters: With the new series, Xiaomi has hoped to compete with rivals by offering high-end smartphones at a competitive price. The firm has focused the series on quality lenses and imaging capabilities.
Details: The three models – the Xiaomi 12S, 12S Pro, and 12S Ultra – share the same processor, coming with slight differences in other specs like charging speed, cameras, display specs, and cooling system. The three models will be available on Wednesday exclusively in China, coming in two colors for Ultra and four for the other two models, according to Android Authority.
Context: Chinese phone makers have often relied on partnerships with notable camera or lens makers to broaden their appeal. Huawei previously partnered with Leica for imaging systems in smartphones.
Qualcomm and MediaTek plan to cut another 30% in 5G chip orders in the second half of 2022 due to a decline in orders from Chinese phone makers, according to Ming-Chi Kuo, an analyst at TF International Securities and a frequent Apple supply chain news commentator, wrote in a May 22 report.
Why it matters: Weak demand in the Chinese smartphone market has resulted in domestic phone makers cutting orders, causing a ripple effect in the industry. Additionally, android phones are using processors one or two generations behind Apple, making them face a long uphill battle in China.
Details: Qualcomm and MediaTek, two of the world’s largest system-on-a-chip (SoC) makers, have reportedly been forced to cut orders after Chinese phone brands had to cut smartphone orders as a result of Covid-19 lockdowns across China and weak demand for smartphones.
Context: China shipped 17.6 million smartphone units in April, a yearly decline of 21.6% and 12.2% less from March. The decline can be attributed to a drop in market demand and less promising processors for Android phones compared to Apple’s, according to a report from CINNO Research.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi released the Redmi Note 11T Pro and Pro+ on Tuesday, priced at RMB 1,799-2,499 ($270-$374). The new models mark a further move into higher-end markets for the sub-brand Redmi, which was previously focused primarily on budget devices.
Why it matters: The new series is indicative of the maturation of Xiaomi’s phone offerings, which have found significant popularity in China and in developing markets overseas. The new Redmi Note phones, targeted at middle- and high-end customers, will intensify competition between Xiaomi and rival brands such as Oppo’s Realme.
Details: The newly released Redmi Note series promises higher specs than previous Xiaomi models without abandoning the brand’s affordable image.
Context: Xiaomi is the third-largest mobile vendor globally after Samsung and Apple, with a 12.8% of the global smartphone market share in April, according to web analytics firm StatCounter.
Chinese smartphone maker ZTE announced the launch of Axon 40 Ultra on Monday, the third generation of a smartphone that features an under-display camera.
Why it matters: ZTE has adapted an under-display camera design, rather than traditional options like notch display or hole-punch display, to create an all-screen design.
Details: Axon 40 Ultra is equipped with an all-screen 6.8-inch display. The phone maker touts improved screen image quality compared with previous generations.
Context: ZTE also revealed its 2021 overall performance during the product launch, recording 100 million unit shipments, with 50% of chips used in these shipments developed by the firm.
The CEO of Huawei spinoff Honor told state media on Thursday that the smartphone company plans to push overseas sales over the next five years.
Why it matters: In November 2020, Huawei sold Honor, a budget smartphone sub-brand, to a majority Shenzhen state-owned company. In the 18 months since this sale, the firm has steadily gained market share in China and reached the top spot in domestic sales in March. Outside of China, the brand faces fierce competition from Chinese peers like Xiaomi, Vivo, and Oppo, as well as industry leaders like Apple and Samsung.
Details: Honor’s CEO Zhao Ming told China Securities Journal (in Chinese), a state-owned media outlet, on Thursday that the company will “fully launch sales to the overseas markets and expects no bottleneck period for the next five years.”
Context: Founded in 2013, Honor was formerly owned by Chinese telecom giant Huawei as a sub-brand.
On Thursday, Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei released Mate Xs 2, the second generation of its foldable Mate Xs series, priced from RMB 9,999 ($1505).
Why it matters: Huawei first adopted an outer folding design for its foldable phones in 2019, differing from mainstream models that folded inward, thereby solving the key issue of the prominent crease on the screens of foldable phones. With new hardware updates, Mate Xs 2 is vying to be a strong competitor in this vertical.
Details: Targeted at the high-end market, Huawei highlighted Mate Xs 2’s top-line tech specifications at the launch event on Thursday.
Context: In 2021, Huawei shipped 900,000 units of foldable phones, accounting for 10% of the market, a distant second to Korean manufacturer Samsung, which accounts for 88% of the market.
OnePlus, the Chinese smartphone maker owned by Oppo, launched a new product line named Ace, targeting the global mobile gaming market. The company released the first model of the series on Thursday, pricing at RMB 2,499 ($384).
Why it matters: OnePlus is expanding its offering to the global mobile gaming market after launching OnePlus 9R last year.
Details: On Tuesday, OnePlus revealed the new Ace product line for mobile gaming, alongside a new entrance level True Wireless Stereo (TWS) earbuds in a release event.
Context: OnePlus merged with Oppo, another major smartphone brand in China, last year and is now an independent brand under the Oppo umbrella, focusing on overseas markets.
Chinese smartphone manufacturer Vivo released its first foldable phone on Tuesday, targeting premium users with a price tag of around $1,500.
Why it matters: Vivo follows the footsteps of rival brands such as Xiaomi, Huawei, and Oppo, releasing its first foldable phone. Global shipments of foldable phones will hit 15.7 million in 2022, forecasting a yearly growth rate of 107%, according to market research firm CINNO Research.
Details: Using a Samsung display screen, the Vivo X Fold has an 8.03-inch interior display when used in tablet mode and a 6.53-inch exterior display when folded. For comparison, an iPhone 13 has a 6.1-inch display, and a regular iPad is 10.9 inches.
Context: CINNO predicts that Samsung will lead the foldable market this year with a 70% share.
Chinese EV maker Nio is taking a step into hardware by developing its own smartphones, Chinese media 36Kr reported. The move makes Nio the latest Chinese automaker to diversify operations in the hope of protecting its core EV business amid increased competition.
Why it matters: Nio’s pursuit of making smartphones comes as other Chinese tech companies are making plans to build EVs, looking to profit in the world’s biggest auto market embracing EVs.
Details: Nio recently hired Yin Shuijun, former president of the smartphone unit of Chinese mobile internet firm Meitu, to lead the new business in Shenzhen, Chinese media 36Kr reported Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter.
Context: Nio is not alone in exploring new areas for expansion, as multiple Chinese tech companies are also looking to enter the EV space.
Geely is reportedly in advanced talks to acquire Meizu Technology, a domestic smartphone maker backed by e-commerce giant Alibaba, as the Chinese auto group aims to provide a mobile-driven in-car experience and pose a challenge in the smart mobility race.
Why it matters: The move comes against the backdrop of China’s big tech firms, like smartphone maker Xiaomi and search engine Baidu, pushing to develop vehicles with smart cabin systems and autonomous driving technologies, developments that pose major threats to traditional automakers like Geely.
Details: Hubei Xingji Shidai Technology Co Ltd, a smartphone venture launched and majority owned by Geely chairman Eric Li, has begun talks to buy Meizu, a small and relatively obscure smartphone player, Chinese media outlet 36Kr reported Friday, citing people with knowledge of the matter.
Context: Geely announced its entry into the competitive Chinese smartphone market by establishing Xingji Shidai with registered capital of RMB 715 million ($113 million) in the central city of Wuhan in September, Reuters reported. Geely chairman Eric Li owns a 55% stake in the venture, according to Chinese business research platform Tianyancha (in Chinese).
Xiaomi has hired Yu Liguo, a former senior executive at state-owned automaker BAIC Motor, to lead its autonomous electric vehicle (EV) project. The move brings a highly-experienced executive from the traditional auto industry to the 12-year-old smartphone maker.
Why it matters: The hire is the latest sign that Xiaomi is serious about venturing into the EV industry.
Details: Yu has come aboard as vice president of Xiaomi’s auto unit and a “political commissar” at its Beijing headquarters, according to an internal letter published Friday and obtained by Chinese media outlet 36Kr.
Context: The news comes just months after Li Tianyuan, a former exterior designer of BMW’s electric vehicle the iX, joined Xiaomi, an appointment that was made public via a group photo of the firm’s corporate executives posted by CEO Lei Jun last September.
Read more: Drive I/O | Chips, batteries, AV: Xiaomi’s most high-profile auto investments of the year
]]>Smartphone giant Xiaomi on Wednesday announced that it is acquiring Deepmotion, a Beijing-based startup that develops digital mapping technology for autonomous vehicles.
Why it matters: The acquisition is Xiaomi’s latest move in its bid to build its own intelligent connected cars. An expansion into China’s auto sector could greatly expand Xiaomi’s mobile ecosystem and create new revenue streams for the company.
Details: Xiaomi has reached an agreement to acquire Deepmotion Tech Ltd in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $77.37 million, according to the smartphone maker’s quarterly results, released Wednesday. The company did not reveal when it expects the deal to close.
Context: Xiaomi has struck several deals to invest in autonomous driving startups in recent months, as the Chinese tech giant ramps up its efforts to develop driverless car technology and mass produce its first EV in the next three years.
Chinese telecommunication giant Huawei announced major updates to its self-developed operating system HarmonyOS at a launch event Wednesday night. The proprietary system is now being used on phones for the first time, achieving an essential goal for the company.
Why it matters: Huawei has long relied on the Android system, but it lost access to key services thanks to US sanctions in 2019. Huawei is aiming to build a new mobile ecosystem independent of Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS. However, the company chose to focus on promoting the system’s versatility across smartwatches, tablets, and other device at the launch event.
Details: HarmonyOS is available on Huawei’s Mate 40 and Mate X2 smartphone models, as well as smartwatch Huawei Watch 3 and tablet MatePad Pro, the Shenzhen-based company announced Wednesday evening.
Context: HarmonyOS was widely seen as an alternative to Google’s Android mobile operating system, but it has taken Huawei about a little less than two years to deliver the system to phones. Huawei first deployed the system on smart televisions in August 2019 and then on smartwatches in September 2020.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi said Wednesday a US district court has ordered the Defense Department to lift a ban on American investment in the company.
Why it matters: Xiaomi has evidently shaken off a geopolitical burden that have weighed down its shares since earlier this year. It is unlikely that the Biden administration will appeal against the decision.
Details: The US District Court for the District of Columbia issued a ruling ordering the US Department of Defense to remove Xiaomi from the CCMC list, said the smartphone maker in a filing (in Chinese) to the Hong Kong exchange on Wednesday.
Context: An executive order signed by US President Donald Trump in November bans American investment in companies that it deemed owned, controlled, or affiliated with China’s military.
Huawei’s auto push won’t include making its own cars, the company said Monday. The statement comes on the heels of a series of high profile moves into auto technology by the telecoms giant, and reports that it plans to manufacture its own vehicles.
Why it matters: Huawei’s statement comes amid unease from existing carmakers that Huawei will enter the industry by manufacturing its own cars.
Details: Huawei has not invested in any automakers and is not interested in acquiring majority stakes in car companies in the future, the company said in a statement on Monday.
Context: China’s tech and auto industries have long swirled with rumors of Huawei buying stakes in domestic car companies.
Huawei has appointed the head of its smartphone business to take charge of its young vehicle technology unit, part of a wider management reshuffle as the telecommunications giant tries to break into the fast-growing autonomous and electric vehicle sector.
Why it matters: The appointment is expected to initiate a round of restructuring which will place Huawei’s nascent intelligent automotive solution (IAS) business unit and the team that develops and sell in-car services for automakers under its core consumer business group.
Details: Richard Yu, chief executive of Huawei’s consumer business group, was appointed concurrently CEO of the auto solutions unit. Current head Wang Jun will remain as the president of the unit, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told TechNode on Wednesday. Chinese media first reported the shift, citing an internal memo dated Tuesday.
Context: Huawei has been seeking new growth drivers as its smartphone sales plunged globally last year. The smartphone business is running out of key components from US suppliers while being cut off from Google’s Android by the US sanctions.
Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei reported Wednesday that its revenue for the first quarter fell 16.5% year on year, in the company’s largest quarterly top-line decrease since US export restrictions took hold.
Why it matters: The decrease in revenue reflects the toll that US sanctions have taken on a company that was once the world’s largest smartphone maker.
Details: Huawei said in a statement Wednesday that its revenue for the first quarter of this year was RMB 152.2 billion (around $23.5 billion), a year-on-year decrease of 16.5%.
Context: Huawei said earlier this month that its revenue for 2020 reached RMB 891.4 billion, up 3.8% year on year, but slower than the annual growth rate of 19.1% in 2019.
Last week, UK-based semiconductor design company Arm announced plans for the next generation of chips. The v9 architecture comes ten years after the release of v8, which is currently the standard used for mobile phone central processing units (CPUs) and many other processors.
There are some good articles on the new features v9 brings to the table, most notably the Realms feature, which promises to increase security by running applications while data is protected from inspection or intrusion by the host or any other software running on that host. The new architecture will also bring AI/ML extensions for AI support across its CPUs, network processing units (NPUs), and graphics processing units (GPUs), and the ability to improve performance by accelerating workloads in a CPU environment in ways that previously required external hard accelerators.
In short, v9 architecture brings massive new capabilities to Arm CPUs—and OEMs will jump on it for their next lines of high-end equipment and devices. If Chinese companies want to stay competitive globally in the next decade, they need to use it. But the window of opportunity for some of them to buy an architectural license may be closing.
Stewart Randall is Head of Electronics and Embedded Software at Intralink, an international business development consultancy which helps western tech businesses expand in East Asia.
I’ve written an overview of major architectures in China elsewhere, but here’s a brief recap: Many Chinese companies design Arm-based chips, but most will license complete Arm cores on a single-use or multi-use basis, so they don’t have to design a core themselves.
More ambitious chip design companies may get an architecture license, which allows the licensee to change the design itself. This is what you need to create a customized core like the Kirin line of phone CPUs, designed by Huawei’s HiSilicon for use in its phones. But it’s difficult to build a core from scratch, so you have to be highly skilled.
Currently, only two companies in China have an architecture license for v8: Huawei and Phytium Technology, a fabless chip design company focused on Arm server chips..
Arm’s press release included several quotes from high-profile partners around the world, including representatives of three major Chinese smartphone brands; Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun, Vivo CTO Shi Yujian, and Oppo Head of Research Levin Liu. Notably absent were Huawei and Phytium Technology.
Both Huawei and Phytium previously bought architectural licenses from Arm, in part as a way to advertise their independence and control. To help them sell such a message Arm also created Arm China, a separate company that has its own issues.
The smartphone makers that did make the press release, have never been architectural licensees of Arm v8. This could change as they look to develop their own chips. All these companies have been investing heavily in building their own internal chip design capabilities.
However, I think for the time being they will stick with application processors from Qualcomm or MediaTek. As part of Arm’s presentation MediaTek announced that its first smartphone chip using the v9 architecture will be available by the end of 2021, sooner than any Chinese handset OEM would be able to design their own. That’s a lot sooner than they’re likely to be able to make their own.
Chinese handset companies will likely license Arm cores for individual designs, such as Xiaomi’s recent image signal processor design. Xiaomi’s previous attempt at an application processor was somewhat of a failure, and it makes sense for the company and others like Oppo and Vivo to focus first on simpler designs that can help them differentiate their products and also help them gain valuable real-world chip design experience.
So what are we to make of the absence of current licensees Huawei and Phytium? Are they not considered key partners, can they license v9 architecture, and does it even make sense for them to?
Huawei has struggled to access semiconductors and IP since the US placed it on a list of companies which require licenses to buy US or US-linked technology. The absence of either company in Arm’s presser could imply that one or both won’t be able to upgrade to v9.
In response to such speculation, Arm has said that it can continue to license its IP to China including Huawei, concluding that its IP is of UK-origin and so not subject to the US ban. Ian Smythe, vice-president of solutions marketing at Arm said, “Following a comprehensive review, Arm has determined that its Arm v9 architecture is not subject to the US Export Administration Regulations,” adding that Arm had informed US government agencies of this conclusion.
That might not be the last word for Huawei. Ultimately, the US government may conclude that Arm’s Austin facility, which contributes to a lot of its high-performance architectures, means that Arm’s IP is sufficiently of US-origin to face export restrictions.
Phytium is not on the export ban list, and as such does not face the same restrictions as Huawei. However, it is on a list of “military-linked” companies that face restrictions on cross-border investments.
Also, the Washington Post reported today that that the Trump administration was planning to put Phytium on an export blacklist, but “ran out of time”. The article also reported Phytium chips are used at supercomputing centers that design advanced weapons systems for the People’s Liberation Army. This could heighten Washington’s scrutiny of the company, potentially leading to sanctions.
My best guess is that they will go ahead and secure a v9 license without much trouble, but they may be trying to keep a low profile in the hope that the US will not decide to target them. Watch this space.
An architectural license gives Huawei and Phytium a certain amount of security: Once granted, the license is permanent, meaning Huawei would be able to continue designing new v9 chips indefinitely whatever actions Washington takes. But under present circumstances it might not be too useful.
An architectural license does not mean the licensee is licensing a specific core. They receive a set of specs for Arm’s cores and a testing suite. This allows the licensee to customize their own processor to fit their application. They can make cores that are faster, smaller, or less power hungry than standard Arm cores, or otherwise differentiated from standard Arm licensees.
Qualcomm and Apple rely on such licenses to create their chips, as did Huawei for its Kirin series. There are only a handful of such licensees globally, mainly because it costs a lot and requires a lot of time and internal expertise to create your own custom Arm core, while there are perfectly good cores available to license at a much cheaper price.
A license alone isn’t enough to make chips. If Huawei is able to buy an architectural license and does so, it still has no access to the EDA tools it needs and the fabs to actually manufacture a high-end Arm-based chip.
But it could be now or never. As competing companies move to v9, Huawei’s v8 license will soon be obsolete. It could actually make sense for the company to go in on an architectural license it can’t use for now in the hope that further down the line either restrictions on the company are removed or domestic self-sufficiency gets to a point where Huawei can get back into the high-end chip game.
With Nvidia’s acquisition of Arm also on the horizon, Arm could soon become a US-owned company. It could make sense for Huawei to lock in access to its IP now, although the same concerns could also motivate China to block the deal.
Access to IP is a chokepoint for semiconductors in China. As I’ve written before, RISC-V may help with this to some extent, but it isn’t as mature as Arm yet, and processor cores are just one of many different types of IP within a chip.
Despite RISC-V’s growth, Arm’s v9 architecture will be a core component for handset, server, IoT and automotive chips for the coming decade. For Huawei it may make sense to get in now, while it still can.
For its part, Arm will want to be free to license to Chinese companies and will be happy to take Huawei’s money. However, the reach of the US government can be long and if the Nvidia acquisition goes through I struggle to see companies on the entity list being allowed access.
Some domestic analysts argue that Huawei should not rely on architectural licenses. “You may get a v9 license this time, but what about v10 or v11, etc? Does endlessly licensing foreign IP mean independence?” (my translation).
It would be strange to see China without any Arm architectural licensees, but that is a prospect.
We may also see new Arm licensees. Perhaps the likes of Oppo or Vivo will decide it makes sense for them. We all know they are investing huge sums into their own IC design capabilities.
]]>Revenue growth for Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei fell dramatically in 2020 as overseas sales shrank in the wake of US sanctions and disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, the company reported on Wednesday.
Why it matters: The decline comes as Huawei’s revenues shrank in all markets but China. Huawei was placed on a US trade blacklist in 2019, blocking the company from sourcing US-made components without permission.
Details: Huawei’s revenue reached RMB 891.4 billion in 2020, up 3.8% year on year, but down from an annual growth rate of 19.1% in 2019.
This article has been corrected to reflect that Huawei’s consumer business revenue growth fell, not its revenue as previously stated.
]]>Chinese tech giant Xiaomi is throwing its hat into the red-hot electric vehicle market with a RMB 10 billion ($1.52 billion) investment to set up a fully owned subsidiary for its auto business, to be led by chief executive Lei Jun.
Founder and CEO Lei at a press event in Beijing on Tuesday said Xiaomi had decided to strike out on its own on EVs in an effort to operate an ecosystem that will provide seamless user experience, and will not consider outside funding. Lei said he was aware of the complexities of making cars with extreme capital intensity, saying that the company is now ready to pour money into the project and face losses over a long-term period.
“We look forward to the day when Xiaomi cars will run on roads across the globe… This would be the last startup project in my career and I shall stake all I have to work this out,” the 52-year-old serial entrepreneur said (our translation). In an announcement published Tuesday, Xiaomi said the company plans to invest a total of $10 billion in the project over the next 10 years.
Following in Apple’s footsteps, Xiaomi has pledged to develop high-quality EVs with a “best-in-class” connected device ecosystem for global customers, according to Lei. The world’s fourth-biggest smartphone maker recorded shipments of nearly 150 million units in 2020 with an annual growth rate of 19%. Sales for competitors Samsung and Huawei shrank a respective 14% and 22%, according to figures from Canalys.
Xiaomi also boasted of having one of the world’s biggest Internet-of-Things (IoT) platforms, connecting 325 million smart home appliances as of last year, excluding handsets and laptops. It has also remained the top-selling television set maker in China since 2019, accounting for around 20% of market share, according to data compiled by Beijing-based consultancy All View Cloud (AVC).
However, the Chinese consumer electronics giant is seeking new sources of growth amid a slowing market. Its IoT and consumer products segment slowed sharply to 8.6% annually last year from 41.7% in 2019. The company also missed analyst revenue estimates for the fourth quarter, according to Bloomberg.
In the meantime, the global automotive industry is undergoing a landmark transition, and the shift to battery-electric, self-driving cars from traditional, internal-combustion vehicles has reached a major inflection point. China is expected to maintain its global leadership in EV production and adoption. IHS Markit forecasted that China will regain growth momentum at double-digit rates in 2021 and beyond, as the government continues to push the EV industry forward and consumer demand recovers.
Xiaomi has long been rumored to be plotting a move into the booming, crowded EV market. Last week it denied a Reuters report that it was in discussions with Chinese automaker Great Wall Motors for contract manufacturing. Shunwei Capital, a venture capital firm formed by Lei, invested in Nio in its Series A back in 2015 and became an early investor in Xpeng Motors two years later.
Baidu is also accelerating the push into the market. In January it set up a joint venture with automaker Geely. The Chinese search company has set a goal to launch its first own-brand EV within three years, chief executive Robin Li said during an earnings call last month.
]]>Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei will begin charging smartphone makers royalties of up to $2.50 for each 5G-enabled handset they sell that uses its patented 5G technology, the company announced on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The plan means global smartphone makers like Apple and Samsung are likely to pay 5G-related royalties to Huawei, the owner of the world’s largest portfolio of 5G patents, potentially opening a new revenue stream for the company as its smartphone sales shrink.
Details: Huawei has set the royalty for its 5G SEPs to up to $2.50 for each device, said Ding Jianxin, head of Huawei’s Global Intellectual Property, at a press event on Tuesday. The royalty will be charged based on the sales price of the handset at a “reasonable rate,” Ding said.
Context: Huawei is losing its status as a smartphone powerhouse following US sanctions over the past two years. The company has been cut off from the global semiconductor supply chain and now relies on stockpiles to maintain production. But it remains a major standard-setter in 5G, meaning the world’s largest handset makers will still need to cooperate with the company to make 5G phones.
Huawei on Monday unveiled its latest foldable phone as the embattled Chinese smartphone maker ramps up efforts to entice premium phone users in its home market.
Why it matters: Huawei is focusing its limited production capacity on high-end models after being cut off from the global chip supply chain. The new phone is priced starting at RMB 17,000 (around $2,785).
Details: The Mate X2 foldable phone features an 8-inch interior display when unfolded and has an additional 6.5-inch exterior display.
Context: Huawei, once the world’s largest handset vendor, is now ranked third globally after shipping 170 million units in 2020.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi said on Sunday it had sued the US government over a move by the Trump administration which bars American investment in the company.
Why it matters: This is the first legal challenge launched by Chinese firms on the Trump administration’s investment blacklist. The US Department of Defense (DOD) alleges that the entities are “Communist Chinese military companies,” meaning they are owned or controlled by the People’s Liberation Army.
Details: Xiaomi said in a statement filed with the Hong Kong exchange on Sunday that it had filed proceedings in the US District Court for the District of Columbia against the DOD and the Department of the Treasury on Friday.
Context: An executive order signed by former US President Donald Trump in November bans American investment in companies that are deemed to be linked with the Chinese military.
Chinese smartphone brand Honor on Friday unveiled its first model since Huawei sold the unit in November, under pressure from US sanctions.
Why it matters: Huawei sold Honor to keep the brand free from US technology export restrictions. Friday’s launch shows that the strategy has achieved initial success, as Honor’s new phone contains technology that Huawei still finds difficult to acquire.
Details: The 6.7-inch V40 smartphone lineup starts at RMB 3,599 (around $556), featuring a 50 million-pixel camera.
Context: Huawei in November sold Honor to a government-backed consortium. Honor is a budget smartphone brand that Huawei established in 2013. It competes with other budget brands such as Xiaomi and Oppo while the Huawei brand sells to the high-end handset market.
Using your smartphone at restaurants has become the standard, and sometimes the only, way to order food at eateries in China. Customers scan the QR code displayed on their table and can place an order on their smartphones right away without assistance from waitstaff.
To access the ordering page and digital menu, customers are often required to follow the restaurant’s social media page. Oftentimes physical menus are not in sight; some restaurants won’t provide them at all.
While some customers view mobile phone ordering as an efficient innovation, many still prefer browsing a physical menu and in-person ordering. Aside from feeling impersonal and intrusive, requiring food orders via phone also places the elderly and the digitally unskilled at a disadvantage.
In response, Nanjing Consumer Association said last week that consumers have the right to say no to mandatory phone ordering, and restaurants should offer services that all customers can access. As a government-backed organization, consumer associations in China handle consumer complaints and work with regulators and law enforcement to protect their rights.
“Services without options encroach on consumer rights,” (our translation) Wei Cao, deputy secretary general of the Nanjing Consumer Association said in an interview (in Chinese) with China National Radio.
In late November, China’s State Council introduced a set of measures aimed at bridging the technology gap for seniors. Specifically, the guidelines require the technology used in existing services including transportation, consumption, and healthcare be evaluated to guarantee accessibility for the elderly. The guidelines also encourage the development of tech innovations aimed at seniors.
For restaurants, the smartphone ordering system is more cost efficient—it’s cheaper than making physical menus and saves on manpower. It also helps speed up the ordering process, thus allowing more customers to dine during busy hours.
Having customers place their orders via smartphone can save restaurants about 30% of their labor costs, Yu Xuerong, president of the Jiangsu Catering Industry Association, said in the report.
It has also proven a boon for business marketing. In order to access a menu, diners are frequently required to “follow” restaurants on social media and subscribe to promotions, driving down marketing expenses while boosting user engagement.
Those cost savings can come at the expense of user privacy. Customers are often required to fill out personal information such as names and phone numbers, and agree to share their locations, which helps businesses collect user data, analyze what dishes are more popular, and raise prices accordingly.
Felix Lee, a frequent restaurant-goer in Beijing, doesn’t like ordering on his phone at restaurants, even as a digitally savvy millennial.
“It deprives my freedom to subscribe to pages at my own will and I am annoyed by their occasional pop-up ads,” he said.
Lee normally unfollows the restaurant pages to unsubscribe from the promotions as soon as he completes his order.
But for the elderly and the digitally unskilled, requiring food orders via smartphone is more than a nuisance and unpleasant privacy invasion.
According to a report by the China Internet Network Information Center, there were 463 million Chinese not on the internet as of June. They are nearly evenly divided by location: 43.8% live in urban areas and rural residents account for 56.2%.
Increasingly widespread mobile adoption has marginalized this segment of China’s population. Some businesses have even transitioned to mobile-only ordering, and refuse to take cash.
In November, an elderly woman was denied the ability to pay in cash for her medical insurance. She was told to either pay on her phone or have a relative help her, according to a video posted to Chinese microblogging site Weibo. The video attracted more than 23 million views and 20,000 reposts, spurring netizen backlash against the bank.
The same month, a video of a 94-year-old woman being propped up by family members in order to activate face recognition for her social security card at a bank in Hubei province went viral on Weibo. It sparked discussions about the burden forced upon the elderly by increasingly digitized services and the technology gap.
Restaurants need to develop and advance digitally to cater to customers using more efficient methods, while maintaining service channels for those accustomed to traditional ways, Yu of the Jiangsu Catering Association said.
The Covid-19 pandemic has further compounded the technology gap. Essential information and services such as opening hours for public places and reservation systems at hospitals require using the internet, while digital health codes are required to enter public spaces. Digital reservation and registration is often required at tourist sites as well.
An elderly man over the summer in the northeastern Chinese city of Harbin, and another senior citizen in Fushun in nearby Liaoning province earlier this month were barred from boarding buses because neither had a smartphone to scan the health code required for entry, according to Chinese news reports.
Seniors are often forced out of such digital checkpoints, and vital tasks such as hospital visits and Covid-19 tests commonly require online reservations during the pandemic. Chunhui Wang, professor and economist with Zhejiang University said in an interview (in Chinese) that senior citizens need to receive digital education while guidance and assistance should also be provided to those in need for mobile payments, health code scans, and digital reservations.
Correction: an earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that Yu Xuerong of the Jiangsu Catering Industry Association said restaurants could save 30% of labor costs through marketing and promotions, rather than through the practice of placing food orders via customer smartphones.
]]>Shares of Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi plunged 11% on Friday morning after the Trump administration added it to a blacklist, forcing Americans to divest holdings and barring share purchases.
Why it matters: Xiaomi is the second-largest smartphone maker in the Chinese market and ranks fourth globally. The company has been caught in US-China geopolitical tensions for the first time, its troubles bearing resemblance to its main rival Huawei.
Details: The US Department of Defense on Thursday added Xiaomi and eight other Chinese firms to a list of “Communist Chinese military companies,” according to a statement on its website. An executive order signed by US President Donald Trump in November bans American investment in such companies.
Context: Xiaomi shares reached a historical high of HKD 35.3 (around $4.6) on Jan. 5, driven by strong sales and a weakened Huawei. Market research firm Trendforce expects Xiaomi will be ranked the world’s third-largest smartphone vendor in 2021 while Huawei, which ranked third in last year, will fall to seventh this year.
Update: This article has been updated to include a statement from Xiaomi and to correct a typographic error.
]]>Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei, once the world’s largest handset vendor, will fall to seventh place in global smartphone shipment rankings in 2021 according to a report published Tuesday.
Why it matters: Huawei is losing its status as a smartphone powerhouse following US sanctions over the past two years. The company has been cut off from the global semiconductor supply chain and now relies on stockpiles to maintain production. To increase its chances of survival, it sold in November its budget handset brand Honor, which is now becoming a rival.
Details: Huawei is expected to ship 45 million smartphones in 2021, ranking seventh among global vendors, according to a Trendforce report published Tuesday. Huawei shipped 170 million units in 2020, ranking third globally, according to the report.
Context: Huawei was briefly ranked the world’s largest smartphone vendor in the second quarter of 2020, according to market research firm IDC. The company’s smartphone shipments then plunged 22% in the three months ended September to 51.9 million units, causing it to fall to second place on the top smartphone vendor list for the quarter.
Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei announced on Wednesday a reorganization that granted the head of its consumer business group oversight over its car business operations as the company moves to shore up promising new revenue streams.
Why it matters: Huawei is sharpening its focus to its budding connected car business following US sanctions which have strangled the company’s smartphone unit by clamping down on its access to chipsets.
Details: Huawei’s Intelligent Automotive Solution business unit was moved under the consumer business managing board, currently led by the group’s CEO Richard Yu, according to an announcement (in Chinese) dated Oct. 26 and posted to its online community on Wednesday.
Context: Huawei in May 2019 placed its auto business unit under its information and communication technology (ICT) infrastructure managing board which mainly oversees its carrier and enterprise businesses and is led by rotating chairman Eric Xu.
This article and its headline were revised Friday to include comment from Huawei.
]]>Xiaomi reported on Tuesday better-than-expected revenue of RMB 72.2 billion (around $11 billion) for the third quarter, the fastest growth the Chinese smartphone maker has seen since its 2018 listing.
Why it matters: The strong performance shows how the Beijing-based company has benefited following US sanctions imposed on its archrival Huawei. Xiaomi’s global smartphone shipments grew 45% year on year to 47.1 million units in the third quarter while Huawei’s fell 23% year on year to 51.7 million units, according to market research firm Canalys.
Details: Revenue for the world’s third-biggest smartphone vendor in the September quarter grew 34.5% year on year, said the company in a filing with the Hong Kong exchange Tuesday.
Context: Xiaomi beat Apple to rank the world’s third-largest smartphone vendor in the third quarter behind South Korea’s Samsung and Huawei, according to Canalys.
Huawei is selling its budget smartphone unit Honor, the company said Tuesday, to a consortium that is majority-owned by the local Shenzhen government in a deal to keep the brand alive.
Why it matters: The sale is a direct consequence of US technology export restrictions imposed on the Shenzhen-based company over the past year and a half. The world’s second-largest smartphone maker has lost access to most high-end semiconductors as well as Google apps and services on the Android operating system crucial to its handset offerings.
Details: Newly founded Shenzhen Zhixin New Information Technology will acquire all of the business assets of the Honor brand, according to a joint statement published in a local newspaper on Tuesday.
Context: Honor is a budget smartphone brand that Huawei established in 2013. It completes with other budget brands such as Xiaomi and Oppo while the Huawei brand sells to the high-end handset market.
China’s Cyberspace Administration has cracked down on eight mobile browsers, ordering them to stamp out clickbait and misinformation.
Why it matters: By targeting the largest platforms, the authorities are sending out a signal to other smaller browsers that they may be next in line. Platforms that do not change their practices likely face suspensions or bans.
Details: The order affects Alibaba-backed UC, Tencent’s QQ, Huawei, Qihoo’s 360, Tencent-backed Sogou, Xiaomi, Vivo, and OPPO.
Context: Unlike the US where services are protected from liability for content published on their platforms, China holds companies accountable for content that appears on their home pages. Mobile web browsers wield distinct power: 872 million people in China access the internet through their mobile phones, and browser home pages have become key to their news-reading habits.
]]>Huawei said Friday its earnings for the first nine months of the year “met expectations,” though its revenue growth in the third quarter slowed sharply from the previous quarter.
Why it matters: The deceleration highlights how US restrictions on Huawei’s ability to source crucial high-end semiconductors have taken a toll on the Chinese telecommunication company’s business.
Details: Huawei said in a statement Friday that it booked income of RMB 671.1 billion (around $100.4 billion) in the first nine months of the year, growing 9.9% year on year.
Context: After three rounds of export restrictions, the Chinese telecommunications equipment and smartphone maker has lost nearly all access to semiconductors using US technology—specifically the high-end chips it needs for its carrier and handset businesses.
China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts
Elliott and James welcome IDC’s VP of Device Research Bryan Ma to the show. They discuss how Xiaomi is benefiting from Huawei’s international troubles, the foothold they continue to establish in India and SE Asia, and how the pandemic has been a surprisingly good year for PC makers.
For a map of the Xiaomi ecosystem, and more information on its web of product partners, check out VC Roundup | How big China tech uses investments to build empires.
Hosts may have interests in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
Get the PDF of the China Consumer Index.
Watchlist:
Hosts:
Guest:
Editor:
Podcast information:
Chinese smartphone maker Huawei is in talks with several Chinese electronics companies to sell parts of its Honor smartphone unit, Reuters reported Wednesday.
Details: Digital China, a Shenzhen-based cloud service provider, has become the frontrunner in the contest to buy Huawei’s Honor business. Other suitors include Chinese electronics maker TCL and budget smartphone maker Xiaomi, according to Reuters, citing people familiar with the matter.
Go deeper: Exclusive: Huawei in talks to sell parts of its Honor smartphone business – sources – Reuters
]]>Shanghai-based Hurun publishing group estimated that Huawei, which it calls the most valuable consumer electronics company in China, is worth $160 billion in its first-ever report ranking the country’s consumer electronics companies published on Monday.
Why it matters: Assessing Huawei’s value is difficult because the company is not publicly traded. The report offers a glimpse of the mysterious company’s overall size and how its value has been impacted by US sanctions aiming to cut it off from the global semiconductor supply chain.
Details: Hurun said in a report (in Chinese) Monday that Huawei was valued at RMB 1.1 trillion (around $160 billion), ranking it as the most valuable consumer electronics company in mainland China.
Context: Though not listed, Huawei releases reports about its quarterly and annual earnings. In July, the company said its revenue for the first six months of the year grew 13.1% year on year to RMB 454 billion.
The US Commerce Department license granted to Intel allowing it to continue supplying Huawei shows that Washington wants the Chinese telecommunications company to rely on US products rather than make its own chips, according to an industry expert.
The US government has imposed license requirements on chipmakers around the world which want to sell products that contain US technology to Huawei. The new restrictions came into effect on Sept. 15.
Silicon Valley-based Intel supplies integrated circuits such as systems-on-chip (SoCs), central processing units (CPUs), and graphics processing units (GPUs), used in computers. However, the company doesn’t contract out its manufacturing capabilities to make customized chips for clients, nor does it sell chip-making tools or machinery.
The move shows the US “may be willing to grant licenses as long as it doesn’t help Huawei create its own chips,” Stewart Randall, head of electronics and embedded software at Shanghai-based consultancy Intralink, told TechNode on Thursday.
Intel’s license to continue shipping to Huawei doesn’t help Huawei make its own chips but it does help the Chinese company’s server, personal computer, and laptop product lines, Randall said, adding that this shows Washington wants Huawei to “rely on US chips.”
Intel is the first company known to have received US permission to sell chips to Huawei. Huawei suppliers around the world, including Chinese contract chipmaker Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp., South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix, and Taiwanese chip designer Mediatek, have applied to the US government for similar licenses. None of the applications have yet been approved.
On Wednesday, Huawei rotating chairman Guo Ping told reporters that US chipmaker Qualcomm is applying for a license to sell its chips. “If Qualcomm were granted the license, we will be willing to use their chips to make phones,” said Guo.
Huawei now relies on its stockpile of semiconductors to continue making products ranging from 5G base stations to smartphones and laptops. Guo said Wednesday that the company is still verifying how many wafers they have in stock.
“We have sufficient chip stock for base stations… But as to smartphone chips, we are still looking for solutions because Huawei uses hundreds of millions of smartphone wafers every year,” Guo said.
Analysts said Huawei’s stockpile of chips may last four to 10 months. “We are confident that Huawei’s chip stock can last until the end of this year… It is possible that Huawei will still have chips to use in the first half of 2021, but, in this period the uncertainty is huge,” IDC analyst Will Wong told TechNode in an interview last week.
]]>Huawei’s long-awaited Android replacement is here. On Sept. 10, the company announced that its in-house mobile operating system, the Harmony OS, will be available on handsets starting next year.
The announcement came just days ahead of a US Commerce Department deadline which cut the company off from all possible sources of high-end chips, critical for its smartphone and carrier businesses. Analysts said the company may have to halt hardware production starting in the middle of next year.
The company first debuted Harmony OS in August 2019, shortly after new Huawei devices lost access to Google services on the official version of Android as a result of a May 2019 US ban. Harmony was widely seen as an alternative to Google’s Android mobile operating system, but at first Huawei only deployed it on devices like smart television sets and smart watches.
A third operating system outside of Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android could be an important source of revenue for Huawei’s consumer business to offset losses in hardware sales. In 2019, income from mobile services accounted for 10.5% of Google parent company Alphabet’s revenues and 17.8% of Apple’s, according to TechNode’s calculations.
Experts say that it will be difficult for Huawei to generate material revenue from the new operating system. The company faces challenges ranging from establishing a profitable business model to attracting app developers. If Huawei can no longer make smartphones, persuading other phone makers to adopt the system will prove challenging, they said.
Both Google and Apple take a 30% cut from transactions made on their platforms, which include sales of apps and digital content, as well as in-app purchases.
But there is a difference in China which makes earning revenue more difficult, according to Rich Bishop, chief executive officer of Appinchina, a company that helps overseas developers distribute their apps in China.
“All of the [third-party Android] app stores in China only make money from games. For any non-gaming apps, they don’t charge any fee.”
“But if they are able to make Harmony OS successful, for example, they have 500 million people around the world using Harmony OS to download apps and games from the Huawei store, then potentially they could make a lot of money,” Bishop explained.
“But that really depends on whether they can persuade everybody to sign up to Harmony OS.”
It is relatively easy for a developer to convert an Android app to a Harmony OS app, Bishop said. “Huawei obviously is a massive company with a lot of resources, and they are working very hard to try to persuade as many developers as possible to set up a Harmony version of their apps,” he said.
But according to Richard Yu, president of Huawei’s consumer business, the company’s mobile service ecosystem now has around 1.8 million developers, but only 96,000 apps. Most of these developers have yet to make an app for Harmony OS.
“Most developers are basically going to wait and see because they don’t particularly want to start assigning resources to develop for a third mobile OS,” Bishop said.
“I think they are just gonna see how successful the ecosystem is and whether other companies are making good money from Harmony OS, and then they may decide to develop Harmony OS apps too.”
The other challenge Huawei faces in promoting the Harmony OS is attracting new users. It is now the world’s largest smartphone vendor, but its handset capacity is under huge pressure because of the semiconductor restrictions.
Rumors spread that Huawei smartphone peers Xiaomi, Oppo, and Vivo could adopt Harmony OS, with a number of articles in Chinese either predicting that they would or calling upon them to do so in support of the company. Huawei denied that it had reached a deal to put Harmony on competitors’ phones, but none of the other companies have commented.
But they would have to be very patriotic to support a competitor.
“Smartphone makers like Xiaomi, Oppo, and Vivo have been facing great pressure from Huawei in the past year after it shifted its focus on the domestic market,” Will Wong, analyst at market research firm IDC, told TechNode.
“If they adopt Harmony OS, they are essentially helping Huawei. So I think the possibility is low.”
Bishop of Appinchina agrees. “I don’t think that other domestic manufacturers like Xiaomi and Oppo would want to use Harmony OS, because obviously, it is a much weaker ecosystem than Android. And it’s run by a competitor, Huawei,” he said.
Both Wong and Bishop reckon that the only reasons that other Chinese phone makers would use Harmony OS would be “political.”
“I don’t think Huawei’s competitors will say ‘absolutely no,’ to Harmony OS because the political risk is a very important factor in today’s market,” said Wong.
“The only way I can really see it working is if the Chinese government, because of the US-China decoupling, says: ‘all right, China needs its own mobile OS.’ And therefore, they kind of require every Chinese manufacturer to offer Harmony OS or to have it as an option,” said Bishop.
On Wednesday, Zhang Pingan, president of Huawei’s consumer cloud business unit, told reporters that the ecosystem of Harmony OS is always “open” to other smartphone makers.
“I think we will work together with all hardware makers to build a better ecosystem and help developers avoid switching back and forth between different platforms,” he said.
]]>US officials have complained many times about “loopholes” that allow Huawei to keep its chip supply chain running in the face of export controls. Now it seems that the “loopholes” are closed, and tight.
After being subjected to three rounds of export restrictions, the telecommunications equipment and smartphone maker has lost nearly all access to semiconductors using US technology—meaning the high-end chips it needs for its carrier and handset businesses.
Richard Yu, president of Huawei’s consumer business, said Aug. 7 that the company had to stop making its in-house Kirin chips, which are widely used on the company’s mobile devices, because they are made using US technology.
Despite the looming bans, Huawei has been on a roll lately. The company was ranked the world’s largest smartphone vendor for the first time in the second quarter. However, in an event last week, Yu said the growth of Huawei’s smartphone sales during this period had been “affected” by “a shortage of components.”
In other people’s eyes, however, the situation could be much worse. Analysts told Reuters that US export restrictions would threaten Huawei’s status as the world’s largest handset maker, and warned its smartphone business would “disappear entirely” if it could not source the chips it needs.
The uncertainty in Huawei’s supply chain has also taken a toll on its carrier business. The British and French governments have told domestic telecom operators to phase out Huawei equipment, citing the risks of the company’s supply chain continuity.
It looks like the end of the world for the company. But what options does Huawei still have? We asked experts, and it doesn’t look good.
Huawei has faced escalating US restrictions for over a year.
May 16, 2019: The US government bans American companies from shipping components and technology to Huawei, but granted the company a series of reprieves, the last of which expired in August.
May 15, 2020: The White House announces plans to tighten its stranglehold, cutting Huawei off from global semiconductor foundries that use American software and technology to Huawei. These news rules officially took effect on Tuesday.
Aug. 17: US government expands licensing requirements, seeking to prevent Huawei buying US-linked chips through subsidiaries or third-party vendors
After Tuesday’s deadline, Huawei will lose access to most of the semiconductor fabrication plants in the world that can make high-end chips because they use US technologies. Huawei cannot buy ready-made chips that contain US technology from any third parties because of the August ban.
Experts said that the US will move swiftly to block any further “loopholes.” The company has stockpiles of chips, but only enough to last a few months. It has to plan out how to use these stockpiles in order for its production to continue.
Huawei has an in-house chip designer known as Hisilicon. This subsidiary designs a variety of chips used in Huawei’s products. They include the Kirin series for mobile devices and the Balong series for telecommunications gear.
Hisilicon could struggle to continue designing Kirin or Balong chipsets because it lost access to US-origin electronic design automation (EDA) tools, Jan-Peter Kleinhans, project director at Germany tech-policy think tank Stiftung Neue Verantwortung, told TechNode in an email.
EDA is a category of software tools for designing electronic systems such as integrated circuits and printed circuit boards. The EDA industry is dominated by three US, or US-linked, firms—Synopsys, Cadence, and Mentor Graphics. Together they account for 60% to 70% of the global EDA market and around 95% of sales in China.
But even if Huawei managed to design chips, it would still need an outsourced fabrication plants to manufacture them, like nearly all semiconductor companies. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), South Korea’s Samsung, and Chinese company Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. (SMIC) are Huawei’s existing suppliers. All three are forbidden to use US-origin manufacturing equipment to fabricate chips for Huawei, Kleinhans said.
They can apply for licenses to continue supplying Huawei—but it’s up to Washington whether to grant them. SMIC, China’s biggest chipmaker, said Tuesday it had applied to the US government for a license to continue supplying to Huawei. TSMC reportedly planned to apply for a license to continue shipping to the company. A unit of Samsung is also seeking approval from the US government to continue supplying Huawei.
“The outlook is rather grim,” Kleinhans said. “Also, even if Huawei finds ways around the current restrictions, the US government’s trajectory is pretty clear: this is now the third export ban against Huawei. There can easily be a fourth or a fifth, if they deem it necessary.”
So far, none of the applications have been approved.
With Huawei’s chip stockpile, smartphone production may not need to halt immediately. But the question is: How long will Huawei’s stockpile last?
Four to 10 months, according to analyst Will Wong at market research firm IDC.
Wong told TechNode that Huawei currently has a stock of high-end chips from TSMC and medium- to low-end chips from Mediatek, a Taiwanese chip designer.
“We are confident that Huawei’s chip stock can last until the end of this year,” Wong said. “It is possible that Huawei will still have chips to use in the first half of 2021, but, in this period the uncertainty is huge.”
The company might use Mediatek chips to produce more medium- to low-end phones during the rest of the year to make up its losses in the high-end handset market, said Wong, adding that Huawei might have to save some chips for production next year.
“All Huawei has to do is to bide its time, because there might be a turnaround after the November US presidential election,” he said.
“No matter how much chip stock does Huawei have, it has to race against time,” he said. “There may be a better situation after the election, or perhaps Huawei can manage to produce chips in China, but the key is time.”
A Huawei spokesman declined to comment on questions about the company’s plans for chip sourcing. He said in a statement to TechNode that the company is “still evaluating the long term impact of the matter at hand and are actively seeking solutions to minimize the impact for everyone.”
The US government has been pushing Western countries to avoid Huawei equipment in their next-generation 5G networks, saying that the Chinese government could use its gear for spying purposes. Huawei, the world’s largest supplier of telecom equipment, has repeatedly denied the allegations.
Eventually, some US allies announced they would begin excluding Huawei. But what made some European countries dodge Huawei products were not Washington’s security warnings, but the possibility that the company would not be able to supply them due to semiconductor export bans.
In July, the United Kingdom and France instructed telecom operators to phase out Huawei equipment from their current networks over the next few years. Both countries cited the uncertainty around the company supply chain as a reason for doing so.
“The UK government revised its 5G strategy and excluded Huawei from further 4G/5G deployments exactly because they are not confident that Huawei will be able to serve British operators in the future because of the US export control,” said Kleinhans.
“Following the UK’s analysis, I think it’s fair to say that Huawei will struggle to maintain or even upgrade customer networks in the near future,” he said.
]]>The global economic downturn caused by Covid-19 was always going to hit the smartphone market. But as smartphone makers shifted their conferences online, pandemic conditions eased up in China, making it the only phone market in the world that saw sequential growth in the second quarter of the year.
But behind the dazzling results lurk some worrying realities that have cast a shadow over both China’s prospects and the global smartphone market. Chinese leader Huawei is trapped under sanctions. Oppo and Vivo have proved limited in their capacity to produce top-notch handsets.
Function fatigue has set in among consumers. For years, manufacturers have bet on camera technology to sell new devices. Consumers are eager for truly disruptive innovation to raise its head.
The Insights column is a little different this week—we’re bringing you an overview of the state of play of China’s smartphone makers, courtesy of our colleagues at cn.technode.com. Translation by Heather Mowbray.
Apple’s Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri told investors on a recent call, “Last year we started selling new Iphones in late September; this year we expect supply to be available a few weeks later.” The new phone may launch on time, but delivery and sales will face delays.
It may well be that Tim Cook isn’t worried about the delay. Last year, even though Apple was forced to accept price cuts and massive discounts, the new Iphone 11 became one of the best-selling phones in China. Alongside it came the revamped Iphone SE, whose strong value for money made it the most popular Apple model in the world. Global shipments of the new Iphone SE reportedly reached 12-14 million units in Q2 2020.
The success of these two phones gives Apple reason for confidence. According to data from market research firm CINNO, in Q2 2020, Iphone sales in China increased 62% year-on-year to 13 million units.
With this momentum, the launch of the 5G Iphone, expected in fall 2020, is hotly anticipated.
5G is becoming an essential selling point in the Chinese market. Statistics from the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology show that domestic 5G mobile phone shipments reached 13.911 million units in July. The data shows that 5G smartphones accounted for 62.4% of domestic mobile phone sales, exceeding 60% of the total for the second consecutive month.
The wave of 5G replacements is likely to build over the next few months. Analysis by research firm Counterpoint suggests that more than 50% of global 5G phone sales this year will come from China.
At the end of March, Huawei rotating chairman Xu Zhijun said that 2020 was Huawei’s most difficult year, and called for the company to come together to overcome its difficulties.
When it rains, it pours.
According to international media reports, Huawei’s temporary reprieve from a ban on importing US technology expired on Aug. 13 this year. There has been no word of a renewal.
Its relationship with the Google Play Store has been severely disrupted. Huawei devices that came with pre-installed Google mobile services can still download and update Google applications through other channels. But newly released phones, such as the P40, cannot use such services.
Huawei is working to mitigate the loss of the Google Play Store. Its phones come equipped with a Huawei suite of mobile services, and a homegrown operating system called HarmonyOS, or HongmengOS in Chinese, is coming to smartphones in early 2021, the company announced Sept. 3.
On the existing foundations of the HarmonyOS ecosystem, breaking into overseas markets may take a while. Few of the world’s most popular apps are available in Huawei’s app store, although some can be installed independently. Richard Yu has predicted that apps like Facebook will eventually join the Huawei app store.
Harder to evade are the US’s new restrictions on the company’s semiconductor supply chains.
Huawei’s executive director Richard Yu said at the China Informatization Hundreds Conference 2020 that due to the second round of sanctions by the United States, Huawei will lose its chip making capacity on Sept. 15. As a result, the company’s smartphone shipments this year might be fewer than last year’s 240 million, Yu said.
The dwindling supply of chips will severely challenge Huawei’s market competitiveness in the phone business. Coupled with the ban on overseas GMS services, its vitality in overseas markets has been struck a heavy blow, and this has cast a long shadow over Huawei’s confident New Year vision.
When Covid-19 hit China, Xiaomi’s shipments were already lowest among the four leading manufacturers, which also include Huawei, Oppo, and Vivo.
Despite strength in online sales channels, the epidemic era hasn’t been kind to it. In Q2 2020, the company accounted for only 10.4%, or 9.1 million, of the 87.8 million smartphone units shipped in China, its 21.9% year-on-year drop in sales second worst among the major brands, data from IDC said.
Xiaomi’s setbacks overseas have been worse as it lost production and order capacity due to the virus. In India, one of its strongest markets, Xiaomi’s overall shipments fell 48.7% year-on-year.
Xiaomi models do not have a reputation for value, and it hasn’t come up with an alluring flagship model to attract consumer attention. Its surround-screen model , announced with much fanfare last year, was indefinitely delayed in 2020. The same holds true for chips. After the first generation of its phone chips was released in 2017, Xiaomi hasn’t released any plans for a second generation.
Xiaomi also lags its peers in R&D spending. In 2019, Oppo and Vivo both increased their R&D spend to RMB 10 billion ($1.46 billion) . Xiaomi only invested RMB 7.5 billion in 2019, and plans to reach RMB 10 billion this year.
Lei Jun, Xiaomi’s co-founder and CEO, has pursued business diversification for a while. But despite growth in IoT sales prior to 2020, Xiaomi remains a smartphone company. Its handset shipments account for 50.1% of its total revenue.
Internet of Things (IoT) products have performed well in recent years. But even in this market, Xiaomi is slowing down, weighed down by excessive reliance on hardware sales and the complicated supply chain logistics of selling hundreds of products. Its Q1 2020 earnings report shows little growth in IoT.
Meanwhile, Oppo has increased its investments overseas and established a semiconductor company called Zheku Technology.
Zheku may be Oppo’s way out. The company has always focused on marketing and offline channels and has suffered a lot during the Covid year. Its eye-catching advertisements—often seen on other manufacturers’ gadgets—are increasingly unable to cover up performance shortcomings. These are now compounded by anti-China sentiment in India, which sent shipments to India plummeting in the second quarter by 51% year-on-year. Oppo has lost more than any other of the top five brands in India.
For Oppo, this year may be the most difficult since it got into smartphones. This is despite Oppo’s accomplishments in 2019: reorganizing its product line, strengthening finances, establishing an independent chip department, developing independent sub-brand Realme, and launching IoT products; it also began to increase R&D to compete with its rivals.
A painful readjustment is now necessary. In the face of these challenges, Oppo recently announced that OnePlus founder and CEO Pete Lau (who will remain founder and CEO of OnePlus) has returned as senior vice president of shared parent company Ouga Holdings, and is fully responsible for the Ouga ecosystem’s product planning and experience, including Oppo.
In desperate times, Oppo is rallying its troops, and wants to reorganize its product line by bringing back veterans of the brand, strengthen differentiation, guard its market share, and regain the attention of its customers—who have very much glanced away.
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Huawei announced Thursday that Harmony OS, its in-house replacement for Android, is coming to smartphones. The mobile operating system will be available to developers in December, company officials said, with consumers to see it next year.
Why it matters: This is the first time the embattled Chinese company confirmed that its HarmonyOS, known in Chinese as HongmengOS, will run on mobile devices. The new OS is a sign that Huawei is inching towards independence from American technology for its smartphone ecosystem.
Details: Richard Yu, head of Huawei’s consumer business group, said in an event Thursday afternoon that HarmonyOS will come to smartphones early next year, as he announced the 2.0 version of the operating system. Developers will get early access in December.
Context: Huawei sold 55.8 million smartphones in the second quarter and, for the first time, reached the top spot in global smartphone vendor ranking, according to market data provider IDC. But the US-China trade war has threatened the company’s access to critical inputs for its smartphones.
Correction: An earlier version of this story wrote that HarmonyOS will be “deployed” to smartphones in December. In fact, it will be made available to developers in December, according to the company’s announcement, and consumers will get phones with the new operating system next year.
]]>Chinese scooter maker Ninebot on Tuesday gained final approval from the Shanghai Stock Exchange to register on the bourse’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market, according to a notice on the board’s website.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based company, incorporated in the Cayman Islands, is expected to become the first foreign-registered company with a variable-interest entity (VIE) structure to list on a stock exchange in Mainland China.
Details: Ninebot has been allowed to submit registration filings to the China Securities Regulatory Commission, the country’s top securities watchdog, for a final review, the STAR Market’s website shows (in Chinese).
Context: Founded in 2014, Ninebot is now the world’s largest vendor of electric scooters. The company snapped up failing American personal-transport manufacturer Segway in 2015.
Huawei said Monday its revenue during the first half of the year grew 13.1%, a significant slowdown from the same period last year as the company faces stricter sanctions from the United States.
Why it matters: The Shenzhen-based telecommunications gear maker’s business in the first six months of the year was hit by a double whammy—a new round of US sanctions imposed in May and the Covid-19 pandemic that has disrupted the global economy.
Details: Huawei booked RMB 454 billion (around $64.9 billion) in revenue in the first six months of the year with a net profit margin of 9.2%, the company said in the statement.
Context: The same period a year earlier, the company reported 23.2% year-on-year revenue growth, before the impact of a May 2019 US blacklisting that sought to cut the company off from American technology. Huawei touted the growth as proof that US sanctions had a limited impact on its business.
The board of Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi passed Tuesday a resolution on share buybacks, paving the way for the company to repurchase up to $4.3 billion in shares.
Why it matters: Tuesday’s announcement is part of the company’s broader efforts to boost investor confidence.
Details: Xiaomi’s board of directors has approved a resolution allowing the company to repurchase up to 10% of its issued shares, according to a statement filed with the Hong Kong stock exchange on Tuesday.
Context: The Beijing-based company is looking to roll out a more aggressive share buyback initiative following an earlier plan announced in September to repurchase up to HK$12 billion (around $1.6 billion) worth of stock in an effort to halt its decline in value.
Apple has advised one of its Airpod factories in China to make a major investment in a key supplier as the company moves to create an alternative to its longtime Iphone assembler, Taiwan’s Foxconn, according to a Nikkei Asian Review report.
Why it matters: The deal would bring Luxshare-ICT, a lesser-known Chinese assembler of Apple’s Airpods, closer to producing Iphones, grabbing share from Foxconn.
Details: Luxshare has been in talks with Taiwan’s Catcher Technology, the world’s second-largest metal casing provider, for more than a year and has recently entered a deeper round of negotiations, according to the Nikkei report, citing a person familiar with the talks.
Context: Luxshare will help Apple produce 3 million to 4 million Airpod units in Vietnam in the second quarter as the California-based tech giant further diversifies its production out of China, according to another Nikkei report published last week.
]]>
Smartphone sales in China fell 22% in the first quarter as a result of the Covid-19 outbreak, according to a report released Wednesday, with embattled Chinese smartphone maker Huawei the only manufacturer that saw a growth in the quarter.
Why it matters: The coronavirus outbreak has accelerated a downward trend in the world’s largest smartphone market.
“The drastic fall in Q1 China market was primarily dragged down by the dismal sales of smartphones in February (-35% YoY)… However, during the lockdown period in China, local e-commerce giants such as Alibaba and JD.com managed to sustain efficient business operations and delivery services in major Chinese cities outside of Hubei province. For the strong support from these e-commerce players, China’s smartphone sales appeared less negative than our original expectation.”
—Flora Tang, research analyst at Counterpoint Research
Details: Huawei was the only smartphone vendor in the top five that posted positive year-on-year growth of 6% in the first quarter, according to the report. The Shenzhen-based company retained the top spot in China’s smartphone market with 39% share.
Context: Huawei said last week its total revenue for the first quarter grew only 1.4% year on year to RMB 182.2 billion (around $25.7 billion). During the same period, China’s GDP contracted 6.8%.
In partnership with
Editor’s note: This article is first published on TechNode Global by Shi Hui Tan in partnership with Huawei Assistant. We believe in transparency in our publishing and monetization model. Read more here.
Huawei recently showed off new, Asia-specific content that’s just rolled out to Huawei Assistant.
Keen to give it a whirl, TechNode’s editor, David Cohen, gave a review of the Chinese version of Huawei Assistant and Huawei Ability Gallery at our Shanghai office while our TechNode Global (Singapore) country manager, Shi Hui Tan, visited a Huawei store in the city-state to check out the international version.
If you can’t play the video above, click HERE.
Huawei is facing a big challenge outside of China where, as was reported in 2019, new versions of its smartphones lose access to popular applications and services including Google Play, Google Maps and the Gmail app.
To overcome this, Huawei is launching its own version of these, including the revamped Huawei Assistant and the new Huawei Ability Gallery. It’ll be interesting to see if the big-name Southeast Asia apps will sign up for the Huawei Ability Gallery – it’ll be a crucial factor for Huawei to stand up against the competition.
]]>Xiaomi has hired the president of an online bank to lead the smartphone maker’s budding consumer finance business, the company announced Thursday.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based company is actively seeking new growth opportunities outside smartphones as global handset sales shrink. The company has been trying to leverage its massive global handset user base to boost other business segments such as personal cloud service and consumer finance service.
Details: Xiaomi has appointed Zhao Weixing, the former president at Sichuan Xinwang Bank, as the vice president of its fintech branch, the company said on social media platform Weibo (in Chinese) Thursday.
Context: In January, Chinese regulators gave Xiaomi the green light to set up a consumer finance company in the southwest municipality of Chongqing.
China’s Huawei reported Tuesday sharply slower revenue growth in the first quarter of 2020 as the company faces both trade restrictions from the US and the global coronavirus outbreak.
Why it matters: The dismal revenue numbers for Q1 provide a picture of how the Covid-19 outbreak has affected China’s electronics manufacturing sector and smartphone market.
Details: Huawei’s revenue for the first quarter grew only 1.4% year-on-year to RMB 182.2 billion (around $25.8 billion), according to a company statement published Tuesday.
Context: Huawei reported 23.2% year-on-year revenue growth in the first half of 2019. This was shown by the company as proof that the US sanctions had a limited impact on its business.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has spent $64.5 million on buying back its shares in the past two days, company filings show.
Why it matters: The buybacks come during a slump in Asian markets, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index falling 1.9% on Wednesday and the Japanese market benchmark Nikkei 225 index down by 1.7%.
Details: Xiaomi spent HKD 250 million (around $32.3 million) on a share buyback on Wednesday following a similar repurchase of HKD 249.6 million on Tuesday, according to company filings to the Hong Kong bourse.
Context: Shares of Xiaomi have dropped by nearly 20% since March, canceling out the company’s gain since its HKD 12 billion share repurchase announcement.
]]>Watch: We got our hands on Xiaomi’s new super secret phone. Here’s our review.
Handset sales in China surged 241% in March compared with the previous month though were still down 23% from a year earlier, according to official data released Monday.
Why it matters: China’s handset consumption has started to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic but its aftershocks continued to weigh.
Details: China’s handset sales in March were 21.8 million units including 6.2 million which are 5G compatible, according to the MIIT.
Context: Despite the rebound in monthly sales, observers were not optimistic about China’s smartphone market over the long term. According to a recent report by market research firm Strategy Analytics, 37% of Chinese consumers have delayed plans to upgrade their handsets.
In partnership with
Editor’s note: This article is first published on TechNode Global in partnership with Huawei Assistant. We believe in transparency in our publishing and monetization model. Read more here.
How many apps are there on your phone? And of those, how many do you use pretty much every day?
I’d bet that, apart from games, it’s not that many. So wouldn’t it be useful to have quick access to your most loved and most useful apps in one place, with just one swipe?
How many apps are there on your phone? And of those, how many do you use pretty much every day?
I’d bet that, apart from games, it’s not that many. So wouldn’t it be useful to have quick access to your most loved and most useful apps in one place, with just one swipe?
That’s basically the idea behind Huawei Assistant, which puts your most essential apps and services – like sports results, stocks, and travel itineraries – onto smart cards that are accessible with one swipe.
Huawei says app developers get more views for their content or more clicks for their services by laying them out in cards inside Huawei Assistant. Globally there are 400 million monthly active users of Huawei phones, boosted by shipments last year of 240 million.
This points to the changing face of home screens across the phone industry as laid-out, real-time, and easily accessible content becomes more important. Device makers are betting that people – as they spend more time on personal devices rather than consuming media in more traditional ways – want to focus on their most used apps while also doing less tapping. For example, within Huawei Assistant, a user can see the weather, traffic reports, and upcoming reminders – all the crucial info they need within the next hour or so – in one glance, each ensconced in their own cards, all scrollable on one screen. No need for opening or closing any apps.
The ongoing evolution is so vital to the mobile industry that it already has a name: the “minus one screen.” And Huawei Assistant is a prime example of why it makes sense.
As well as these widgets, this handy screen also has an AI search bar, helping you find items on your phone as well as answers from across the web. Plus, it has shortcuts so you can access your most used actions with just one tap.
To help folks make the most of Huawei Assistant, there’s Huawei Ability Gallery, where you can find a bunch of new apps primed with smart cards.
At a virtual press conference last week for Malaysia’s launch of the Huawei P40 series of phones, the company showed off new, Asia-specific content that’s just rolled out to Huawei Assistant.
One of these is a stocks card from Investing.com, which looks like this:
And this is how it looks on the same Huawei P40 when dark mode isn’t activated:
The smart card is customizable so that it shows the stocks you want to keep an eye on:
Plus, now there’s football results courtesy of the popular 365 Scores:
You can configure your teams to watch, from leagues across the globe.
Coming soon to Asia are smart cards for flight bookings, hotel reservations, taxi-hailing, and food orders.
These Huawei Assistant smart cards are not confined to your phone – they’ll appear on your Huawei TV or tablet as well, if you own those, exactly as you set them up on your phone.
Continuing with the theme of customization, Huawei Assistant has shortcut buttons, which appear above the AI Tips, where you can set up four icons for the most important things you need to jump to.
If you’d rather not configure your own, the phone will suggest a few buttons that it thinks you’ll need most often.
You’ll notice a fifth button – that allows you to browse a lot more handy shortcuts to tools and service on your phone and around the web.
Another useful card within Huawei Assistant is the AI Tips one, which shows things like notifications, reminders, or phone usage info.
Plus there’s Newsfeed, giving you real-time and popular news stories based on the language and region settings of your device.
And this is what the AI search bar looks like:
Huawei Assistant is fixing a problem that cropped up as soon as apps went mainstream – that all your useful information and fun content got siloed across numerous apps. Now’s the time to tap less but get more done.
Get more information about Huawei Assistant here.
]]>Huawei, the world’s largest maker of telecom equipment by revenue, released earnings for 2019, saying that it missed a target set internally by $12 billion due to a US trade ban. The company also warned of retaliation by the Chinese government.
Why it matters: After a year of “unprecedented challenges” brought by a US ban on sales of its gear to American companies, the marquee Chinese technology company reported significantly slower profit growth and revenues which missed its own goals by a wide margin.
“The Chinese government will not just stand by and watch Huawei be slaughtered on the chopping board.”
—Eric Xu, Huawei rotating chairman, at a press event
Details: Huawei reported revenues of RMB 858.8 billion ($123 billion) for 2019, an increase of 19.1% year on year and maintaining consistent top line growth compared with a year ago when revenue rose 19.5% on an annual basis.
Context: The US banned its companies from doing business with Huawei in May but has since issued temporary licenses to allow Huawei to continue. It extended on March 10 this license again to May 15.
Xiaomi said Tuesday it has resumed production capacity by 80% to 90%. However, they also warned that demand for smartphones in overseas markets would be hit by the spread of Covid-19 in March and April.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based smartphone maker has a strong presence in overseas markets such as India and Europe. It is likely to see a drop in sales in the first half of the year as the pandemic spreads around the world.
Read more: Xiaomi wants to be exempted from an e-commerce ban in India
Details: Xiaomi’s production was severely impacted in February when the coronavirus outbreak intensified in China, but its production capacity has been resumed to 80% to 90% of the normal state, according to Wang.
Context: Market research firm IDC estimated that smartphone sales in China may fall as much as 40% in the first quarter compared with the same period last year.
Chinese handset makers including Xiaomi and Realme are asking the Indian government to list smartphones as an essential commodity so that they can be sold on e-commerce platforms during the nationwide lockdown in India.
Why it matters: India is one of the most important overseas markets for many Chinese smartphone makers, and a 21-day national lockdown in the country, starting Wednesday, is expected to severely hit handset sales.
Details: Xiaomi and Realme have united with two industrial bodies to seek an exemption for deliveries of smartphone along with other electronic devices during the national lockdown, The Economic Times reported on Monday.
Context: Xiaomi is India’s biggest smartphone vendor with a market share of 27% in the fourth quarter, while Realme is the fifth-largest with an 8% market share.
Luo Yonghao, the founder of struggling Chinese smartphone maker Smartisan, announced Thursday he is embarking on a new business endeavor: an e-commerce livestreaming business selling gadgets, groceries, and snacks.
Why it matters: Luo is an internet celebrity as well as one of China’s most iconic tech entrepreneurs with a number of outrageous antics under his belt. But he is also ridden with debt after notching a series of failed businesses including an e-cigarettes startup and a synthetic “shark skin” manufacturer.
Details: Luo will form a team to sell products including tech gadgets, books, furniture, groceries, and snacks on livestream platforms, he said in a post on his social media account on Thursday.
Context: In November, Luo was placed on an official blacklist for debt defaulters, which barred him from spending on travel and other major purchases. A court record showed that he along with Smartisan, the smartphone company he founded, owed RMB 3.7 million to suppliers.
This week, our source was Ran Caijing, where we came across an overview of the effects of the Covid-19 epidemic on Chinese tech companies—especially smartphones. Below, we summarize the key points of the article for TechNode members. TechNode has not independently verified the claims below.
Jin Yufan, Su Qi, and Tang Yahua (edited by Wei Jia)
Ran Caijing, March 13
While Chinese domestic epidemic peak has passed, Covid-19 has begun to erupt worldwide, forcing the World Health Organization to adjust the situation to a “global pandemic” level.
Affected by the epidemic and other factors, global financial markets have melted down. The US stock market has collapsed three times so far, twice this week. Affected by the broader market, star Chinese stocks fell across the board: Alibaba fell 6.94%, Jingdong fell 7.87%, Pinduoduo fell 6.42%, NetEase fell 7.88%, Baidu fell 8.55%, and Ctrip fell 5.95%.
The impact of the epidemic on the global economy has gradually spread from the demand side to the supply side. China, and the United States, Japan, South Korea, Germany, Italy, Spain, Iran, and other countries with severe outbreaks are mostly important exporting countries.
The epidemic has sounded alarms for different industries:
According to the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO), the global outbound tourism market in 2018 was worth $1.45 trillion. Chinese tourists spent more than $277 billion abroad, close to one-fifth of global outbound tourism spending. However, right now the global tourism industry is practically stalled, while Chinese domestic travel service providers are also suffering unprecedented hits.
Bigger companies can live longer. Those who already struggle with capital may die, especially if the emergency carries on for two or more months.
There is not much support for SMEs in terms of policies. The rent and labor costs cannot be reduced, with the only solution being layoffs
According to Ran Cai Finance, when Ctrip was at its worst situation, domestic orders losses were at around 80%. Now they are gradually recovering, but international orders present the most difficult recovery in the short term.
That’s bad news for Ctrip since outbound travel, international flights, high-star hotels, and other businesses may not account for the largest number of people, but represent a larger proportion of revenue and profits.
Even though Chinese factories are resuming work and retail stores are reopening, the demand side continues to be suppressed.
The entire mobile phone industry is not driven by the supply chain, but by the market. As long as the consumer demand and consumption level in the market are still there, retail growth will occur after the epidemic.
Recently, the American market research company Strategy Analytics predicted that global smartphone shipments in 2020 will be 10% less than expected, and China’s smartphone shipments will be 15% lower than expected.
As the world’s second-largest smartphone manufacturer, Huawei has cut its 5G smartphone shipments by 20% this year. Apple also announced in February that it was unable to meet previously released revenue expectations in the first quarter.
The impact on the supply side is greater. A mobile phone requires at least 300 parts. Even though basic parts are produced domestically, key components are still subject to foreign companies in the United States, Japan, and South Korea. In addition to Huawei’s own Kirin chip, other mobile phone manufacturers commonly carry Qualcomm’s chips, whereas the memory comes mainly from Korean and Japanese companies. The current epidemic situation in these countries is no less serious than in China.
However, the crisis on the supply side of mobile phone manufacturers may be an opportunity for domestic suppliers. In fact, the lower-ranked supply companies that were originally used as backup solutions in China may have the opportunity to make their debut on the main chain. Ultimately, if the epidemic lasts for a long time, it may break the current mobile phone supply chain layout.
According to Chinese Ministry of Commerce data, as of February 20th, the number of masks imported was more than 12 million units. Cross-border e-commerce platforms and enterprises of 59 cross-border e-commerce test zones have imported nearly 1 million sets of protective clothing.
The categories that e-commerce platform users pay most attention to during the epidemic are masks, disinfection products, and health products. With the epidemic becoming stable in China, the demand for e-commerce platform users to purchase protective masks has stabilized.
The global epidemic is urgent, and the supply chain, logistics capacity, and pace of resumption of international business on the e-commerce platforms have been disrupted.
The spread of the global epidemic will inevitably affect the operation of global logistics, which will be a major challenge for foreign trade in the future, but what is really affected is the deep participation in overseas local procurement and warehousing.
The interruption of global personnel flow, the lack of a large number of face-to-face exchanges, and the cancellation of exhibitions have led to low communication efficiency and limited global exchange of innovative ideas, which will adversely affect the development of technology products, software and hardware. However, the occasion may also force the introduction of more advanced communication methods with the use of 5G, AR, VR, holographic projection, and sensor fields.
The obvious winner in the epidemic is the gaming industry. The market share of Chinese games is already the biggest in the world and, thanks to the pace of globalization, the expansion of Chinese game companies has gone very fast. Companies such as Tencent and FunPlus have achieved very good results in global competition and in the event of the outbreak they will continue to grow in the global market.
Companies that focus on games going overseas are likely to replicate the game boom during the Chinese New Year. With the large-scale isolation in many places around the world and the decrease in offline entertainment, games will get a big explosion in players.
Besides gaming, recently the price of study packages of online education companies has increased, and the visit traffic has more than doubled compared with the same period last year.
Another bright side may lay in the fact that new advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence, Internet of Things, big data, 5G, and cloud computing have performed well in many aspects of the epidemic. Big data and cloud services are effective assistants for epidemic control; 5G cloud intelligent disinfection, temperature measurement and delivery robots have also quickly joined the fight against the epidemic; unmanned operations have greatly reduced the probability of contact infection and cross infection and improved the efficiency of medical staff.
From a Chinese perspective, PMI has fallen to a historic low, even lower than the 2008 financial crisis, with the pain much more severe than during the SARS period. Looking at the world, the global PMI is also declining sharply. Therefore, for the Chinese domestic market, in addition to the export of epidemic prevention-related supplies, the overall probability of overall trade exports in the second quarter will be greatly affected.
However, if the epidemic situation is effectively controlled within two months, China’s technological innovations such as e-commerce, especially the fresh food e-commerce industry, online education, games, etc., as well as enterprise (government) information-based tracking, will usher in fast growth.
Finally, even though the impact of the epidemic on the global Internet industry is minimal, the impact on the physical industries is long-lasting, even fatal to some companies. Because of the uneven climate and healthcare conditions in overseas countries, the epidemic development around the world is not easy to stop.
]]>Foxconn warned Tuesday that its first quarter revenue may decline 15% as a result of the Covid-19 epidemic as the Taiwanese manufacturer struggles to restore normal production levels in its China factories.
Why it matters: The warning from Foxconn, China’s biggest private-sector employer, highlights the effect that the Covid-19 outbreak has had on the country’s economy, especially in the electronics industry.
Details: Foxconn said its revenue would drop 15% year on year in businesses including consumer electronics and enterprise products in the first quarter, Reuters reported, citing company Chairman Liu Young-Way.
Context: Foxconn booked NTD 1.054 trillion (around $35.2 billion) in revenue in the first quarter of 2019.
Huawei is testing a new search app similar to Google for its smartphone ecosystem in a bold new step to further challenge the US search giant on its home turf.
Why it matters: The Chinese telecom and smartphone giant has been working on replacing all Google apps and services for its in-house Huawei Mobile Service (HMS) framework on Android phones.
Details: Huawei is recruiting users in the UAE to test its new Huawei Search app, according to a forum post published on Feb. 26 on the company’s website.
Context: Citing security reasons, Google last month warned users against loading its apps through unofficial channels to new Huawei devices made available to the public after the trade blacklist.
Popular infection simulation game Plague Inc. has been removed from Chinese app stores, Apple and Xiaomi users noticed today, after enjoying renewed popularity during the Covid-19 outbreak.
Why it matters: The removal shows just how serious the country’s authorities are in managing the public perception of the virus.
Details: TechNode has confirmed that Plague Inc. is not available on the Chinese versions of the Apple and Xiaomi app stores as of Thursday.
Context: In January, the eight-year-old game beat Minecraft in Apple’s US App Store’s paid games popularity rankings, according to market intelligence firm Apptica. This happened on the day that Wuhan, the central Chinese city considered the epicenter of the outbreak, was cut off from the world.
Update: added a statement from the game developer in the Details section.
]]>A factory of iPhone assembler Foxconn in central China is reportedly offering bonuses of up to RMB 7,000 (around $996) to each new recruit in an effort to lure workers back to plants and restore normal production levels.
Why it matters: The Taiwanese contract manufacturer is struggling to resume production in China after the deadly Covid-19 virus stopped millions of migrant workers from returning to work after the Spring Festival holiday.
Details: Foxconn’s main iPhone assembly factory in Zhengzhou in central Henan province is offering RMB 7,000 as an incentive to new workers who meet certain requirements, Chinese business news site Star Market Daily reported on Sunday.
Context: China is pushing people to get back to work as the “world’s factory” tries to balance containing the Covid-19 outbreak that has killed more than 2,600 people and offsetting the hit to its economy.
Huawei launched an upgrade to its foldable smartphone on Monday, putting on offer for overseas users its proprietary ecosystem to replace the Google app and services it has been banned from.
Why it matters: In launching its self-developed app ecosystem to users outside of its home turf, the Chinese tech giant is ratcheting up its competition with Google in the Android service market. It has stepped up efforts to lure users and developers to switch to its alternative to the Google Mobile Services (GMS) framework, which it lost access to in May.
Details: Huawei launched the Mate XS in an event live-streamed from Barcelona. The new model is an upgrade of the Mate X phone that it showcased last year which features a flexible screen that can fold into a 6.6-inch smartphone and unfold into an 8-inch tablet.
Context: Google has banned Huawei from using GMS on new phones as a result of a US trade ban imposed in May.
Huawei will launch in Europe next week its first smartphone that will run on the company’s in-house service framework instead of Google’s, as the Chinese handset giant moves to offset a US trade ban’s impact on its overseas smartphone sales.
Why it matters: The move marks Huawei’s efforts as the world’s second-largest smartphone maker to challenge Google’s dominance in the Android ecosystem in markets outside of China.
Details: The Shenzhen-based company has chosen not to substitute the open-source Android mobile operating system that its handsets all run on. Instead, it developed alternatives to popular Google apps and services that it lost access to as a result of a US trade blacklisting that took place in May.
Context: Huawei has accelerated its pace to promote HMS and lure more developers to its app platform.
China’s biggest smartphone makers are delaying new product launches that had been scheduled around the Mobile World Congress (MWC) after the event organizer announced it was calling off the world’s largest mobile phone trade show this year.
Why it matters: The annual event held in Barcelona is one of the most important stages for Chinese smartphone makers to unveil new products to an international audience. The exhibition’s cancellation and forced delays for product launches could hurt revenues from overseas markets, compounding expected losses in domestic sales brought by the Covid-19 outbreak.
Details: GSMA, the MWC organizer, announced Wednesday that the event this year was cancelled due fears about the virus outbreak in China which has spread to countries in Europe and North America.
Context: Multiple telecommunication firms including Ericsson, Nokia, Intel, LG, Sony, and Amazon, as well as hardware companies had pulled out from the MWC prior to GSMA’s announcement.
iPhone assembly plants in China belonging to Foxconn will not return to normal production volumes for at least another week due to the novel coronavirus outbreak, multiple media reports have reported, with some factories remaining closed and delayed returns expected for significant parts of its labor force.
Why it matters: Foxconn, also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., is China’s largest private sector employer and the world’s biggest iPhone assembler. Delays in Foxconn’s production, a key manufacturing contractor for Huawei, Amazon, Google, and many others, are likely to affect supply chains for several major electronics brands.
Details: Local authorities in Shenzhen have ordered Foxconn to keep its factories closed over the next week due to “violation of epidemic prevention and control” which could result in the death penalty, Nikkei Asian Review reported on Saturday, citing anonymous sources familiar with the matter.
Context: Southern Guangdong province, where Shenzhen is located, has reported the second-highest number of coronavirus infections after Hubei. Shenzhen counts 368 confirmed cases, compared with 337 in Beijing and 295 in Shanghai, according to official data.
Top Chinese smartphone makers including Xiaomi, Huawei, Oppo, and Vivo are teaming up to form an alternative to Google’s Play store to distribute Android apps to users outside China, Reuters reported Thursday.
Why it matters: The four Chinese handset giants together accounted for around 40% of global smartphone shipments in the fourth quarter, underscoring the potential for the partnership to take a chunk of business from Google’s Play store in the international Android app distribution market.
Details: The four companies are forming a group known as the Global Developer Service Alliance (GDSA) which aims to make it easier for developers of games, music, movies, and other apps to market their products in overseas markets, according to the Reuters report citing anonymous sources.
Context: The four companies use respective self-developed Android app stores in addition to third party app stores in the China market because Google services are not accessible in the country.
This article was co-authored by Wei Sheng.
China’s tech stocks have dropped sharply since Jan. 13, when an epidemic disease known as novel coronavirus went global. On Tuesday Feb. 3, they started to recover, but most have a long way to recover from January losses.
E-commerce giant Meituan Dianping opened at HK$109.20 (about $14) on Jan. 13, dropped to HK$99.50 by the end of the day Feb. 3, and has climbed back to HK$100.50.
The stock rise coincided with a strong monetary boost from Beijing on Tuesday. The People’s Bank of China injected RMB 400 billion (about $57 billion) of liquidity to the banking system and strengthened the yuan exchange rate to support the economy.
The liquidity injection was the largest in the past year, sending a strong message to markets that the government will support the Chinese economy during the virus outbreak.
Manufacturers of surgical masks, now widely used and sometimes mandated in China for protection against airborne viruses, have seen a surge in share prices. Stock for three Chinese firms TechNode analyzed have gained 40% in share price since Jan. 13, indicating that investors expect a prolonged health crisis.
But things are looking up this week in tech. Stocks on Shanghai’s tech board started to climb on Tuesday, gaining back on the past few weeks’ losses. The benchmark SSE Composite Index, in which the STAR Market is listed, has gained close to 3% since Tuesday.
China’s Nasdaq-style STAR Market has been on a roller coaster ride after it reopened on Monday. Most shares dropped during the first day of trading after the week-long break with 43 out of 79 listing companies seeing their share prices reach the tech board’s daily limit of 20% downside.
The e-commerce sector has been hit the hardest among those analyzed, as expectations for consumption were low in the past few weeks. Share prices of the six companies TechNode analyzed saw a 9.4% decrease on average until Feb. 3, and have since won back 5.4%.
Millions of people are staying at home this week due to obligatory work-from-home policies, adding on the fact that fears of the virus spreading is running high. But fear of the virus might prove beneficial for e-commerce companies.
“Alibaba and Meituan’s share prices dipped slightly, but are now on an upward trajectory, as investors price in how important e-commerce will be over the coming months,” Michael Norris, leader of research and strategy at AgencyChina, told TechNode.
Cities across China have ordered entertainment venues to shut down and shopping malls to take strict entry measures during the Spring Festival break which went from Jan. 23 through Feb. 2 after a last-minute extension.
“Over the coming weeks, the default for many folks’ consumption will be e-commerce,” Norris said. E-commerce and delivery platforms have already implemented “no-contact delivery,” meaning the delivery driver doesn’t come in person with the person receiving the goods. This scheme meets consumer desires and “the stock market has responded positively to these developments,” Norris said.
Luckin Coffee shares have dropped by 29%, from $44.17 on Jan. 13 to $31.35 on Feb. 3, the biggest drop among the companies analyzed. On Saturday, the US investment firm Muddy Waters delivered a further blow to China’s largest coffee chain, saying that it believes the company is inflating sales numbers. Luckin Coffee stock has increased by 24.56% this week, recovering to $39.05.
Smartphones and telecommunications companies have also seen a drop. The five companies TechNode analyzed showed a 2.3% decrease since Feb. 13.
“We predict the overall smartphone shipment in China to drop by 15% to 20% year on year in the first quarter,” said Fang Jing, chief analyst at Cinda Securities, a Beijing-based investment firm.
The drop is attributable to the government’s calls remain during the Spring Festival holiday in an effort to contain the spread of the virus, Fang said.
The holiday is usually considered a barometer of Chinese private consumption because of the traditions of gift-giving and family reunions. However, fears of the deadly coronavirus that has killed 491 people and sickened 24,363, based on official data, have kept shoppers away from the streets.
“We have seen shipments of smartphones through offline channels drop by 70% during the Spring Festival holiday,” said Fang. “If the situation is not going to take a turn for the better, the percentage will likely increase.”
Instead, people are going online for electronics consumption. Online shipments of smartphones are expected to account for as much as 40% in the first quarter, Fang said, adding that the proportion was only 28% in the same period last year.
With a small store footprint, Xiaomi relies on online sales, which makes it a strong contender for the coming months when e-commerce will become an even bigger pillar of consumption. Its stock climbed 3.29% in the time period analyzed, making it the only rising stock in the smartphones and telcos category.
Compounding on Xiaomi’s relatively good outlook in China, are good results in India. The Beijing-based company remains the top smartphone brand in India, according to research by market intelligence firm Canalys published on Jan. 29.
The epidemic also creates challenges and disruptions for supply chains in China, especially after authorities in some big cities announced rules barring companies from resuming operations for a certain period of time following the break.
Companies in Shanghai, for example, are not allowed to re-open offices before Feb. 10, meaning either remote work or a longer holiday. In the meantime, jobs that require the physical presence of employees, like factories, remain closed.
DingTalk, WeChat Work overburdened as hundreds of millions work remotely
Car manufacturer Hyundai had to close all its factories in South Korea after it ran out of critical components coming from China. The world’s fifth-largest automaker said it would take three to four weeks to switch to parts made outside China.
“We expect that most consumer electronics manufacturers will resume operations on Feb. 9 or Feb. 10, which means a delay of roughly one week,” said Fang.
“But, given that the first quarter is always a low season for electronics consumption in the year, the impact is limited. We expect that orders affected by the delay will account for less than 2% of smartphone makers’ annual orders.”
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this article erroneously reported Meituan Dianping’s stock price as though it were listed in US dollars. The company’s shares are priced in Hong Kong dollars.
]]>News that a Taiwanese supplier for Apple and Samsung with factories in China plans to set up new production facilities in Vietnam following a US-China “phase one” deal is a signal that the trade friction merely hastened the process of electronics manufacturers diversifying from China, according to an analyst.
Why it matters: The so-called phase one trade deal was expected to restore confidence in China’s economy, but Pegatron’s move shows that tech companies are still trying to disentangle their supply chains from “the world’s factory” to mitigate risk.
“The trade war accelerated manufacturers’ moving away from China and it sent a strong message: Do not put all your eggs in one basket.” (our translation)
—Will Wong, smartphone analyst at IDC Singapore
Details: Vietnam lacks the level of infrastructure and skilled labor pool that supports China’s manufacturing capacity, Will Wong, a Singapore-based smartphone analyst at market research firm International Data corporation, told TechNode. But local governments remain hopeful that it will become central to electronics supply chains in the future and are trying to attract investment, he added.
Context: Increasing labor costs and stricter regulation in China had tech companies looking for manufacturing facilities elsewhere prior to the trade war, Wong said.
Includes contributions from Wei Sheng.
]]>Huawei released Thursday a new version of its developer tools aimed at replacing Google’s similar offering as the world’s second-largest smartphone maker struggles to gain independence from US technology.
Why it matters: The company has stepped up efforts to create an app and mobile service ecosystem to replace Google Mobile Service, which it lost access to after a US export ban imposed in May.
Details: Huawei released HMS Core 4.0, a collection of features open to developers, adding capabilities such as Quick Response (QR) code extraction, near-field communication (NFC), and identity authentication, according to a company statement on Thursday.
Context: Earlier this week, Huawei announced it had shipped over 240 million smartphones in 2019, a 16.5% increase compared with the previous year based on data from IDC.
Lenovo and Xiaomi may be in for a legal dispute after the head of the personal computer giant’s smartphone business jumped ship to the smartphone maker on Thursday.
Why it matters: The move followed a leadership reshuffle at the world’s fourth-largest smartphone maker in late November in which the roles of as many as eight high-ranking executives were affected. Xiaomi ceded significant share in the domestic smartphone market to rivals last year, falling to 9% in the third quarter from 12% in Q2, according to market research firm Canalys.
Details: Lenovo said it would take legal action on Thursday, the day Chang announced he had joined Xiaomi.
Context: Chang joined Lenovo in 2000 as a research and development director at Lenovo’s laptop business unit.
China became the largest market globally for smart speakers earlier this year with some 10.6 million units shipped in the first quarter. In fact, three of the world’s five leading smart speaker vendors in the third quarter were Chinese, according to market research firm Canalys.
The top Chinese players are household names: e-commerce giant Alibaba, search operator Baidu, and handset maker Xiaomi. They all rely on a little-known startup called SoundAI for critical voice interaction technology.
The backstory: The Beijing-based startup makes voice recognition and artificial intelligence (AI) software, helping smart speakers from leading manufacturers to listen to and process users’ requests.
Unique selling point: SoundAI’s technology is found in more than 20 million products, ranging from smart speakers and conference systems to robots and connected cars. It also runs a strong research and development (R&D) arm with more than 1,000 patents secured so far, according to its website.
“Voice is the most natural way of communication, and smart speakers will see great demand in the near future. Our voice technology has been used in the smart speaker offerings from top players including Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, Huawei, and Xiaomi. Our cooperation with these firms is not easy to replace.”
—Chen Xiaoliang, founder and CEO of SoundAI, in an interview with TechNode
The investors: The company has closed four rounds of investment to date, bringing in investors such as Baidu, FreesFund, Qihoo 360, Aplus Capital, and the Bank of Beijing.
Present condition: The company has a team of around 200 employees, mainly from top Chinese universities such as Tsinghua and Peking University, as well as tech companies including Google, Broadcom, Tencent, and Baidu.
The landscape: Global smart speaker shipments grew by more than half year on year to hit 34.9 million units in the third quarter, according to market research firm Strategy Analytics. China accounted for 36% of global shipments.
China’s tech giants battle for smart speaker supremacy as price war rages on
Prospects: The company is likely to maintain growth as the smart speaker becomes a fixture in the “vast majority” of Chinese households. Baidu’s recent move to pull out of the price war by cutting subsidies indicates organic demand is increasing.
The Chinese market for wearable devices reached 27.15 million units shipped in the third quarter of 2019, up 45.2% from 20.97 million units in the same time period last year, according to a report from market research firm International Data Corporation (IDC). The report predicts the market to reach 200 million units in 2023.
Why it matters: The report highlights the fast growth of China’s wearable devices market, and the fact that Chinese companies are the biggest players in this field.
Details: Xiaomi is leading the market, with a quarter of all shipments, but Huawei saw the biggest increase in shipments. The Shenzhen-based telecoms giant saw its shipments almost double in the last year, doubling its market share from 10.7% in the third quarter of 2018 to 20.7% in the third quarter of 2019.
Context: Xiaomi overtook Apple as China’s largest seller of wearable devices in 2018.
]]>Chinese augmented reality (AR) headset maker Nreal filed on Tuesday a motion to a California court, seeking to dismiss a lawsuit brought by its US-based rival Magic Leap accusing the company and its founder of stealing its technology.
Why it matters: The June lawsuit brought by a US firm against a Chinese company over intellectual property (IP) reflects the broader dispute between the world’s two largest economies over technology theft.
Briefing: American AR startup accuses Chinese ex-employee of IP theft
Details: In a motion filed with a federal court in San Jose, Nreal claimed that Alibaba-backed Magic Leap is “filing lawsuits to slow down new entrants in the AR market,” according to a company statement.
“We will fight Magic Leap’s meritless legal claims and will not allow them to distract us from innovating and delivering unparalleled augmented-reality products.”
— Xu Chi, Nreal founder, in a statement
Context: Founded in January 2017, Nreal received $16 million Series A+ from investors including Everbright and Baidu’s online video unit iQiyi in January. The valuation is unknown.
Liu Chuanzhi, the founder of Chinese computer giant Lenovo Group, will announce his retirement and step down as the chairman of Lenovo parent company, Legend Holdings, on Wednesday, according to Chinese media reports.
Why it matters: The 75-year-old entrepreneur is widely regarded as the godfather of China’s emerging powerhouse economy and his founding of Lenovo three decades ago still ranks as one of the biggest technology success stories in China.
Details: Legend Holdings will issue a public notice announcing Liu’s retirement after the Hong Kong stock exchange closes on Wednesday afternoon, Shanghai-based media outlet the Paper reported on Monday, citing anonymous sources.
Context: Founded in 1984, Lenovo’s businesses range from producing personal computers, smartphones, and servers, to information technology (IT) management software and electronic storage devices.
Apple’s iPhone shipments in China dropped by more than 35% in November compared with the same period last year, Reuters reported, citing a report by Credit Suisse.
Why it matters: The November figures are the iPhone’s second consecutive double-digit decline despite Apple’s efforts to lure more Chinese consumers by significantly lowering the price of its newly released iPhone 11 series.
Details: Total iPhone shipments in China in the September-November period dropped 7.4%, said Credit Suisse analyst Matthew Cabral in the report, citing data from China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
Huawei widens lead in China smartphone market after US ban: report
Context: Apple has had a tough time in China this year. The company’s smartphone shipments in China fell 28% year on year in the third quarter, while unit shipments for Huawei, its biggest rival in China, surged 66% in the same period, according to data from market research firm Canalys.
Beijing has ordered the offices for all government agencies and public institutions to remove foreign computer equipment and software from their offices within three years, the Financial Times reported.
Why it matters: The government directive, which comes as Washington attempts to limit the use of Chinese technology and is cracking down on some of China’s biggest tech companies including telecommunications equipment maker Huawei and artificial intelligence firm SenseTime, is likely to be a blow to US tech firms such as HP, Dell, and Microsoft.
Details: It is estimated that 20 million to 30 million pieces of foreign-made hardware will need to be replaced, and that the process will begin next year, said the Financial Times report, citing unnamed analysts at state-backed broker China Securities.
Context: Smartphone and laptop maker Huawei announced its in-house operating system, the HarmonyOS, in August in August as a response to the US government’s blacklisting of the company.
Xiaomi co-founder and chairman Lei Jun has stepped down as the company president for China, according to an internal company letter, following a drop in smartphone market share since he took the position in May.
Why it matters: Besides Lei, the company reshuffled seven other high-ranking executives within the ranks of the world’s fourth-largest smartphone maker.
Details: Lei retained his roles as the company chairman and CEO while Lu Weibing, the former brand manager for the company’s budget phone spin-off brand Redmi, will replace Lei as the company president for the China region, according to an internal letter sent to Xiaomi staff on Friday, Chinese business newspaper Time Weekly reported on Sunday.
Context: Xiaomi last week reported 5.5% year-on-year growth in Q3 revenue, in the company’s slowest-ever growth since its July 2018 listing in Hong Kong.
Xiaomi’s Q3 growth slows amid dwindling smartphone sales, Huawei competition
Updated: added that Lei Jun will also remain in his role as CEO at Xiaomi.
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi reported 5.5% year-on-year growth in third quarter revenue on Wednesday, in the company’s slowest-ever growth since its July 2018 listing in Hong Kong.
Why it matters: The underwhelming earnings report reflects the mounting pressure on Xiaomi as it faces aggressive competition from rival Huawei in China’s saturated smartphone market in the past few quarters.
Details: The company’s revenue in the third quarter rose to RMB 53.66 billion (around $7.6 billion) from RMB 50.85 billion the same period a year earlier, a 5.5% year-on-year increase.
“We are in a transitional period from 4G to 5G and the smartphone market is under great pressure… We are very confident about the 5G era because we are good at bringing new technologies to consumers” (our translation).
—Shou Zi Chew, at the earnings call on Wednesday
Context: Xiaomi in September launched the country’s cheapest 5G-compatible smartphone, the Mi 9 Pro, at a starting price of RMB 3,699.
Xiaomi to launch first manufacturing plant in December: chairman
Huawei launched Monday a new lineup of its MateBook D laptops with the Windows 10 operating system pre-installed, days after Microsoft was granted a license from the US government to export software to the company.
Why it matters: The move shows Huawei’s multi-billion dollar consumer business is still restrained by a US trade ban imposed in May that bars the company from purchasing components and technology from American firms.
Details: The company launched two laptops on Monday, the MateBook D 14 and MateBook D 15, which will ship with Microsoft’s Windows 10 operating system, said Yu Chengdong, head of Huawei’s consumer business, at an event in Shanghai.
Context: Microsoft said on Thursday it had been granted a license from the US Department of Commerce to export “mass-market” software to Huawei on Nov. 20, Reuters reported.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has started to pre-install an earthquake early warning system on a recent version of an operating system installed on its smartphone and television sets, the company announced on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based company is one of the first handset vendors to provide the potentially life-saving service.
“Earthquakes are small-probability events and people are not willing to install alert apps on their phones when they don’t happen… It is significant that Xiaomi pre-installs the earthquake early warning system on televisions and smartphones, because people will not need to download related apps to be warned of earthquakes” (our translation).
—Wang Tun, to TechNode on Tuesday
Details: The warning system is pre-installed on Xiaomi’s MIUI 11, the company’s user interface (UI) for smartphones and smart TVs based on Google’s Android operating system released on Oct. 22. Devices shipped with the UI installed will receive the alerts, Fan Dian, the general manager of Xiaomi’s Internet of Things (IoT) platform department, said at a tech event in Beijing on Tuesday.
Context: In June, a 6.0-magnitude earthquake hit Yibin, killing 13 people and injuring 199.
Huawei’s long-awaited Mate X foldable phone sold out within seconds of being made available in China on Friday, months after the planned mid-year launch.
Why it matters: The RMB 16,999 (around $2,419.7) device has become the second consumer-ready foldable phone in China after Samsung launched its Galaxy Fold last week, which also sold out soon after sales opened.
Details: Huawei began selling the Mate X smartphone, which is compatible with next-generation 5G networks, on Friday morning on the company’s e-commerce platform Vmall.
“People want smartphones to be as small as possible when they carry them, but they want them to be as big as possible when they use them… and the foldable phone is a good solution” (our translation).
—Kevin Ho at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019 on Tuesday
Context: The Mate X, which was first released in February at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, features a flexible screen that can fold into a 6.6-inch smartphone and unfold into an 8-inch tablet.
HarmonyOS phone tech is ready but lacks ecosystem: Huawei executive
The technology needed to run Huawei’s in-house mobile operating system, the HarmonyOS, on smartphones is ready, but the ecosystem is still lagging behind, said Kevin Ho, the president of Huawei’s handset product line, on Tuesday.
Speaking at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019, Ho said that millions of applications are needed to perfect the mobile OS ecosystem, and this remains the toughest problem for Huawei to solve at present.
The OS, officially unveiled in August, is widely considered as an alternative to Google’s Android. Yu Chengdong, CEO for Huawei’s consumer business group, said at the launch that HarmonyOS would support a wide range of devices from personal computers to smartwatches, as well as virtual reality glasses, without mentioning any plans for installation on smartphones.
Huawei’s Hongmeng may not replace Android on smartphones after all
Ho reaffirmed that Huawei doesn’t have a plan to launch a smartphone running the HarmonyOS and that the company is still sticking to Android.
HarmonyOS is able to run on multiple internet of things (IoT) devices so developers need only to build one version of an app to deploy it through different platforms, he added.
“Currently we are working with developers around the world [to build the ecosystem],” said He, who called developers to build apps based on Huawei Mobile Services, the company’s alternative to the Google Mobile Services (GMS), the apps and services by Google that often come pre-installed on Android.
The GMS is currently unavailable on new Huawei phones due to the US export ban on the company which bars sales of components and technology from American companies to Huawei.
The company launched the Mate 30 series in September in Europe, marking its biggest smartphone market outside China. It sold without Google apps and services pre-installed, a move which experts believed would slash the appeal of the new models in the West.
Tiago Alves, vice president for Asia Pacific at Portugal-based Android app store Aptoide, told TechNode in an interview in June that no consumers in Europe would want a phone without Google services.
However, he said it would be possible for Huawei to build an ecosystem without Google, and the process should be a “joint effort,“ where those alternatives to Google apps and services such as the Google Play Store, YouTube, and Gmail are populated by many different developers.
If the Huawei OS can offer all of these Google services—something that will take a while to develop—then users will buy a phone that uses the system, said Alves.
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi is planning to enter the Japanese market next year as the company expands its global presence to offset sluggish market conditions and fierce competition at home.
Why it matters: Revenue for the Beijing-based company grew 15% year on year in the second quarter to RMB 51.9 billion (around $7.4 billion) aided by an increase in overseas sales, which accounted for more than 40% of the company’s total revenue.
Details: Wang Xiang, head of Xiaomi’s international operations, disclosed on Monday Xiaomi’s plans to enter the Japanese smartphone market in the next year, according to Nikkei.
Context: In January, Xiaomu announced that it would set up a business unit to expand on the African continent, appointing its Vice President Wang Lingming (no relation) to head up the new unit.
Huawei widens lead in China smartphone market after US ban: report
The high-profile founder of struggling Chinese smartphone maker Smartisan has been placed on an official blacklist for debt defaulters, which bars him from spending on travel and other major purchases, a local court document showed.
Why it matters: The public debt blacklist, maintained by China’s top court and including contributions from municipal-level courts, is part of the country’s growing push to curb nonperforming loans.
Details: Beijing-based Smartisan, along with its founder and former CEO Luo Yonghao, were put on the blacklist for defaulting on payments toward RMB 3.7 million (around $527,000) of debt owed to Jiangsu-based electronics suppliers, according to a consumption restriction order by a local court published on Sep. 24.
Context: Beijing-based Bytedance licensed in January a number of Smartisan’s patents to ramp up its online education business. The TikTok owner also recruited dozens of employees from Smartisan later that month.
Huawei’s handset shipments in China rose two-thirds during the third quarter, helping the firm to hit a market share of 42%, data from market research firm Canalys shows.
Why it matters: The data indicates that the world’s second-largest smartphone maker has fared well at home despite the US blacklisting that is impairing performance overseas.
Unchanged:
Details: This quarter marks Huawei’s sixth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth, and places the Shenzhen-based company way ahead of its competitors with a 25 percentage-point lead over second-placed Vivo.
“Huawei opened a huge gap between itself and other vendors. Its dominant position gives Huawei a lot of power to negotiate with the supply chain and to increase its wallet share within channel partners.”
-Nicole Peng, vice-president of mobility at Canalys
Context: The US ban, enforced in May, cut off Huawei from key suppliers, including chipmakers and Google’s Android operating system used in its devices.
Net profits for Transsion, the Chinese smartphone maker, in the first three quarters of the year surged 732% year on year to RMB 1.3 billion (around $180 million), according to the company’s filing, while revenues continued to slow.
Why it matters: This is the first quarterly earnings report released by the Shenzhen-based budget mobile phone seller since its listing on China’s tech-focused STAR Market in September.
Details: Revenue growth during the three quarters ended Sept. 30 is slowing for the mobile phone maker, down significantly from 12.9% in 2018 and 72.2% in 2017, according to its prospectus filed in April.
Transsion’s lead in African phone market under threat from fellow Chinese rivals
Context: Founded in 2016, the company went public on the STAR Market on the Shanghai Stock Exchange last month, raising RMB 2.8 billion.
Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei said on Wednesday that the company has no plans to sell its foldable smartphone in overseas markets and that the device will launch in China on November 15.
Why it matters: The world’s second-largest smartphone vendor, hamstrung by a US export ban that blocks access to the most popular features of Google’s Android mobile operating system, is approaching overseas markets with caution as it ramps up marketing efforts in its home territory.
Huawei to launch new 5G-capable handset in Europe without Google
Details: Kevin Ho, vice president of Huawei’s consumer business unit, told reporters at the launch of the Mate X foldable phone on Wednesday that there is no timetable for the device to go on sale in overseas markets because its demand has exceeded supply in China.
“Our strategy is based on carriers’ 5G roll-out in different regions… A global launch plan [for the Mate X] is under review.”
—Huawei spokesman to TechNode on Thursday
Context: This is not the first time that Huawei has deferred its overseas markets from launch plans for new handsets.
Update: an earlier version of this story referred to Kevin Ho as He Gang, as he is also known.
]]>Chinese financial service providers including Alipay, WeChat Pay, and Bank of China withdrew the fingerprint authentication feature from their apps on several Samsung smartphone and tablet devices known to be affected by a glitch in the sensor.
Why it matters: Samsung’s security snafu comes as its China operations are on the decline.
Details: After Samsung confirmed on October 17 reports about the glitch in its fingerprint reader, a number of bank and payment apps in China, the UK, South Korea, and Israel temporarily disabled the fingerprint authentication feature, warned users to disable the feature on their smartphones, or have pulled support for the feature from their apps.
Context: The Korean electronics conglomerate topped the chart in global smartphone shipments in the second quarter of 2019 despite its shrinking share of the China market.
Apple CEO Tim Cook started a three-year term as a top adviser at Tsinghua University, China’s most prestigious academic institution, chairing his first meeting on October 18, according to the school website.
Why it matters: Cook’s appointment places him at the heart of Beijing’s goal to increase the gravitas of Chinese universities.
“In the next three years, I will work with all of the board members to promote the development of Tsinghua University School of Economics and Management and to lead the effort to build it into a world-class school.”
—Tim Cook, CEO of Apple
Details: The university announced Cook’s participation in the advisory board meeting and his mandate on its WeChat account.
Context: Apple is one of few Silicon Valley giants whose products are allowed in the Chinese market, along with Microsoft and Oracle.
There are around 35 million households with smart speakers in China, and the device’s popularity is increasing rapidly, according to a report released by market research firm Strategy Analytics on Thursday, with some 59% of respondents saying that they can’t imagine living without the gadget.
Why it matters: In the two years since its emergence in the Chinese market, smart speakers have evolved from niche gadgets into one of the most popular electronic devices in Chinese households, making the country the largest market for the product worldwide.
“The Chinese market for smart speakers is growing extremely rapidly and this research shows that Chinese consumers love the convenience and entertainment value which smart speakers offer. If what Chinese people say turns out to be true, smart speakers will be in the vast majority of households within the next few years.”
—David Watkins, director of smart speakers and screens at Strategy Analytics
Details: Around 63% of the individuals surveyed who do not currently use a smart speaker plan to buy one within the next year, said the report. Another 22% said they planned to purchase one later.
China’s tech giants battle for smart speaker supremacy as price war rages on
Context: In April, it was reported that Amazon, the world’s largest seller of smart speakers, hired thousands of workers to listen to voice commands from some of its Echo smart speaker users.
Transsion Holdings, the largest mobile phone vendor in Africa, priced its initial public offering (IPO) on Monday at RMB 35.15 (around $4.93) per share to raise RMB 2.8 billion on China’s Nasdaq-style tech board.
Share prices for the Chinese smartphone maker opened 50.7% higher at RMB 53, valuing the company at RMB 42.4 billion (around $5.95 billion).
Why it matters: The Shenzhen-based budget mobile phone seller has a strong presence in emerging markets such as Africa and India, but has been criticized for its weak research and development capabilities.
Details: The Huawei lawsuit has had limited impact on Transsion’s performance in the market. Its share price peaked at RMB 69 per share on Monday morning, and closed 64.4% higher than its IPO pricing at RMB 57.8 for a market capitalization of RMB 46.2 billion.
Context: Transsion Holdings was founded in 2006 by former employees of Ningbo Bird Company, which was once one of the biggest mobile phone makers in China.
Chinese drone maker Ehang has secretly filed an application for an initial public offering with Nasdaq, seeking to raise as much as $200 million, Bloomberg reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter.
Why it matters: The drone maker joins a number of Chinese startups seeking to raise funds on US stock markets, such as coffee chain Luckin Coffee, despite Beijing’s efforts to lure high-tech firms to list domestically.
Details: Ehang plans to offer 10% to 15% of its shares in the IPO, with the company’s valuation not yet set due to volatile market conditions, according to the report.
Context: Founded in 2014, the Guangzhou-based company specializes in drones used for commercial uses such as agriculture.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi unveiled the country’s cheapest 5G-compatible smartphone on Tuesday as the company seeks to revive its image as an affordable handset brand in the 5G era.
Why it matters: The world’s fourth-largest smartphone maker is looking to offset slowing hardware sales by taking advantage of momentum promised by the impending launch of ultra-fast 5G internet.
Details: The Mi 9 Pro, which debuted on Tuesday at an event in Xiaomi’s headquarters in Beijing, will start at RMB 3,699 (around $520), significantly cheaper than any other 5G smartphones launched in the Chinese market.
“This year is the initial phase for 5G smartphones, and the costs for them are higher, that’s why the Mi 9 Pro is more expensive than the Mi 9. Please understand!” (our translation)
—Lei Jun, Xiaomi founder and CEO, at the Xiaomi 9 Pro launch on Tuesday
Context: Xiaomi launched its first 5G smartphone, the Mi Mix 3 5G, in February at the Mobile World Conference in Barcelona, Spain. The EUR 599 (around $658) device went on sale in Spain and Italy in May but hasn’t arrived at its home market yet.
This story has been updated to include the Mi Mix Alpha announcement and to correct the name of the Mi 9 Pro.
]]>Apple said on Monday it will keep making new Mac Pro desktop computers in the United States after the company was granted certain tariff exemptions from the US government, reversing earlier plans to move production to China.
Why it matters: The California-based tech giant has been embroiled in a trade war between the US and China, with the American President Donald Trump pressing the company repeatedly to move more of its production from China to the US and imposing billions of dollars in tariffs on Chinese-made goods.
Details: The Mac Pro desktops will continue to be manufactured in its Austin, Texas facility, said Apple in a statement on Monday.
“…every Apple product is designed and engineered in the US, and made up of parts from 36 states, supporting 450,000 jobs with US suppliers, and we’re going to continue growing here.”
—Tim Cook, Apple CEO, in the statement
Context: Apple had tapped Taiwanese contractor Quanta Computer to manufacture the Mac Pro and was ramping up production at a factory near Shanghai, according to a Wall Street Journal report in June citing people familiar with the plans.
The Chinese startup that is behind KFC’s recent drone deliveries in Hangzhou aims to revolutionize the country’s food takeout market.
Ordering food online in China is easy and convenient—One click and your cuisine can arrive within 30 minutes. Now, Hangzhou-based startup Antwork wants to improve it further by using drones instead of delivery drivers.
The backstory: Antwork wants to build low-altitude airspace logistics networks in urban areas that are capable of replacing human labor and cutting costs in China’s multi-billion food delivery and courier markets.
Unique selling point: Antwork is the first Chinese company to pass the Specific Operations Risk Assessment (SORA), the Civil Aviation Administration of China’s multi-stage process of risk evaluation for certain unmanned aircraft operations. The certification means that Antwork can conduct urban parcel delivery using drones, co-founder and chief operating officer Zhao told TechNode.
“We are the first company to obtain approvals to conduct drone delivery in crowded metropolitan areas…It took us from January through July to complete all of the assessment processes from the CAAC, and they were very cautious and strict. This also proves that our technology is recognized by the authorities and is advanced.”
— Zhao Liang
The investors: Apart from Panda Capital and Unity Ventures, the company’s other backers include Gobi Partners, Sequoia Capital China, and Tisiwi. It has closed three funding rounds since 2016, while the amounts for the first two deals were not disclosed.
Present condition: Antwork has already started some commercial operations in Hangzhou, where it is working with fast-food chain Kentucky Fried Chicken to deliver food orders by drone, Zhao told TechNode.
The landscape: Other players in China’s drone logistics market include hardware maker Ehang and food delivery services Meituan and Ele.me.
Prospects: According to Zhao, Antwork aims to eventually become an urban air mobility (UAM) provider, meaning that it will be able to move not only goods but also people by air.
]]>“With the increase in labor costs, machines will finally replace human workers in many industries in the future. Drones have advantages over human beings in terms of speed and efficiency, so they can do better in the logistics sector, where the market is very profitable.”
— Xie Zhenliang, managing director of Unity Ventures, told TechNode.
Huawei launched a new 5G-compatible smartphone lineup in Munich, Germany on Thursday without Google apps or access to its services as the Chiese tech giant contends with a US trade blacklist barring it from purchasing American-made technology.
Why it matters: Experts believe that a lack of Google apps and services will slash the appeal of the Mate 30 series in the western markets such as Europe, Huawei’s biggest overseas smartphone market.
Details: The Mate 30 series will operate on an open-source version of Google’s Android operating system, but they won’t come with popular Google apps such as Gmail, YouTube, or the Google Play Store.
Context: Huawei is the world’s second-largest smartphone vendor following South Korea’s Samsung and the biggest smartphone seller in China.
Chinese vendors in August sold 291,000 5G phones or less than 1% of the country’s overall mobile phone shipments despite efforts to boost slowing smartphone sales by offering new, cutting-edge handsets.
Why it matters: The gloomy sales signal skepticism from Chinese consumers about pricey 5G handsets prior to widespread rollout of the next-generation networks.
Details: August smartphone shipments were down 5.3% year-on-year to 30.9 million units in China, according to a report by the China Academy for Information and Communications Technology.
Chinese buyers shrug off lack of 5G as orders for Apple’s iPhone 11 surge
Context: Smartphone vendors are scrambling to offer handsets compatible with next-generation wireless networks amid a saturated and slowing smartphone market.
While Huawei’s US woes continue, one Chinese handset maker has already managed to do the impossible and gain a foothold in the market. OnePlus may not be as well-known as more prominent players such as Huawei and Xiaomi, but the company has secured a firm following overseas.
Amid reports that a new OnePlus flagship handset could land as soon as next month, TechNode looked at Wikipedia data to see how interested English-speaking markets really are in the Shenzhen-based company and how its popularity compares with the other players.
Wikipedia is often the first port of call for potential customers as they look to learn more about a brand or product. Hits on the online encyclopedia can act as a strong indicator of a brand’s level of exposure in different markets.
OnePlus has long pursued a “global-first” strategy, and Counterpoint ranks the company as the world’s fifth-largest premium smartphone brand, though it only makes up a 2% share. The company is not the only Chinese smartphone maker to pursue expansion into overseas markets, and it still trails players like Huawei and Oppo.
TechNode looked at Wikipedia product page view trends for the OnePlus 7 compared within equivalent flagships from Huawei and Xiaomi. Ever since the OnePlus 7 launched in May, it has drawn significantly more page views than the Huawei P30 or the Xiaomi Mi 9, two models that far outperform the OnePlus 7 in terms of shipments.
Though the company was a relative latecomer to the smartphone market, it has built up a cult-like following among Android fans since its 2014 launch of the One model, a cut-price device featuring the popular open-source CyanogenMod operating system. The debut handset outperformed countless global competitors in terms of quality, performance and affordability. While CyanogenMod has since been discontinued, OnePlus’ reputation lives on—a key factor behind its click numbers.
OnePlus’ global presence expanded further in late 2018 with the launch of the 6T handset in the US market through partnerships with key carriers including T-Mobile, Verizon, and AT&T. At a time when Huawei and ZTE products were subject to a sales ban in the country, the 6T launch stood out.
Within weeks of its May launch, the OnePlus 7 Wikipedia entry was receiving close to double the views of the Huawei P30 page. Despite an earlier release and significant shipments overseas, the Xiaomi Mi 9 did not have a dedicated entry until April; among the trio, it still has the lowest daily views.
The trend in clicks on the OnePlus 7 page includes two major peaks, both far in excess of 3,000 daily views. The first occurred at its launch while the second one followed a major update of the handset’s OxygenOS system.
In terms of daily page views for Huawei’s P30 line, they hit an all-time high of more than 2,500 in April when the Lite variant model was announced. Another spike in clicks occurred in the middle of the next month when the controversial company was added to the US Entity List, effectively ending Google support for future products.
Even beyond Wikipedia page views, OnePlus does punch above its weight against the industry mainstays. The firm also receives more consistent reviews on key platforms, according to a sentiment analysis undertaken by TechNode.
TechNode calculated sentiment scores for the three handset lines based on review articles and comments on The Verge, Engadget, and TechRadar websites. We counted the number of positive and negative words from content using the Bing sentiment model, a lexicon that simply categorizes certain words as positive or negative. The higher the score, the more positive the sentiment.
Technode found that while the P30 and P30 Pro garnered a higher sentiment score according to reviews, their score from comments came out the lowest. Although reviews of the OnePlus 7 and 7 Pro were less positive, their reader comments were considerably more positive.
Since the analysis only includes English-language websites, the presence of the three brands in other markets globally was not taken into consideration.
In recent years, Xiaomi has grown to lead the Indian smartphone market with a 28% market share in the second quarter. Huawei, on the other hand, has been successful in Europe, ranking second for shipments in the first quarter with a 26% market share, a mere five percentage points shy of the leader Samsung.
Xiaomi and Huawei’s global success is not reflected directly through the English-language Wikipedia pages. According to a Google Trends comparison, OnePlus 7 has been the most searched model in the US in recent months among the trio. However, the Huawei P30 proved a more popular search term on a global scale.
The firm’s decision to pursue a “one flagship per year” strategy has paid off based on the hype surrounding its products this year. OnePlus’ success in launching products in the US markets has also provided a leg up in efforts to compete with Huawei and Xiaomi abroad.
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Vivo announced its new premium device, the Nex 3. Vivo will offer a 5G version of the handset, following the rest of the world’s major smartphone makers.
Why it matters: Vivo is vying to remain competitive in global markets, as telecom operators around the world work to deploy 5G services to consumers.
“We’re trying to provide more choices for consumers.”
—Ding Guanli, Vivo Product Manager
Details: The screen on the Vivo Nex 3 curves over the sides on the phone, giving the device the world’s largest screen-to-body ratio at 99.6%, according to Vivo Nex Product Manager Li Xiang. This “Waterfall Full View” feature is unique in the market, and should remain without any competitors for the next six months, Xiang said in a Weibo post.
Context: Share of international sales for the Dongguan-based company are some of the smallest among Chinese smartphone makers, but is climbing. Vivo accounted for 7.4% of global smartphone shipments in the first quarter of 2019 compared with 5.6% the same period a year earlier, according to data from IDC.
Advance orders for Apple’s new iPhone 11 series soared over the weekend after pre-orders kicked off on Friday, data from e-commerce sites Tmall and JD.com showed.
Why it matters: The absence of 5G compatibility did little to damp the appeal of Apple’s newest handset to Chinese consumers.
Details: Day one pre-sales for the iPhone 11 series—which include the iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro, and the iPhone 11 Pro Max—on Chinese e-commerce site Tmall surged 335% compared with those for the iPhone XR models launched a year ago, according to Chinese media outlet Yicai.
Context: Apple’s rivals in China such as Huawei, Xiaomi, and ZTE have already launched their 5G smartphones for the country’s early adopters.
A Huawei executive has confirmed that its next flagship smartphone, the Mate 30, will deliver without Google services or apps pre-installed, and that alternatives were in active development.
Why it matters: The absence of Google services and apps will have little effect on the new handset’s performance in Huawei’s home market as they are blocked in China, but experts have said that it may significantly lower its appeal in overseas markets.
Details: Wang Chenglu, Huawei’s president of consumer software, confirmed at the International Radio Show (IFA) consumer electronics expo in Berlin last week that the new Mate 30 handset would launch without Google’s apps or access to its services, and the company is developing alternatives so that user experience faces as little disruption as possible, according to Ausdroid, an Australia-based tech news outlet.
Context: Huawei released its in-house mobile operating system, HarmonyOS, last month, which is considered to be an Android alternative.
Apple and its manufacturing contractor Foxconn admitted to breaking Chinese labor regulations by the excessive use of temporary staff in the world’s largest iPhone factory, according to Bloomberg. The accusation came in a report by non-profit advocacy group China Labor Watch (CLW), which also said that Apple’s Taiwanese manufacturer subjected staff to other illegal and harsh working conditions.
Why it’s important: This is not the first time Foxconn, China’s largest private sector employer, has broken Chinese labor laws. Last month, Foxconn fired two executives after another CLW report found that temporary staff and underage interns making Amazon Echo speakers exceeded the legal limit in its Hengyang factory in central Hunan Province.
Details: For its report, CLW claims it sent undercover investigators to Foxconn’s Zhengzhou plant in central China, including one who worked there for four years. At the world’s largest iPhone factory, CLW found that around 50% of the workforce in August was made up of temporary staff, including interns who were in high school. Chinese law stipulates that only 10% of a factory’s plant should be temporary.
Context: CLW published the report ahead of Apple’s iPhone release which will take place Tuesday morning in the US. Foxconn hires thousands of temporary staff every year during key moments of the year to meet demand.
Apple mistakenly transferred payouts totaling around seven times what was due to some of its Chinese app developers as a result of a recent issue experienced by its partner, Deutsche Bank, according to a screenshot of an email sent by the iPhone maker circulating on microblogging platform Weibo.
News of the error began appearing on social media Wednesday, with several Chinese developers posting that their July earnings from Apple’s App Store were paid out at significantly higher rates, multiplied by a factor of around seven times.
Why it matters: As of June, the number of Chinese developers for Apple’s App Store has topped 2.2 million and global sales exceeded RMB 200 billion since the product’s launch in 2010, according to the Xinhua News Agency, citing Isabel Ge Mahe, Apple’s vice president and managing director of Greater China.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request from TechNode on Thursday.
Details: Apple said in the email posted to Weibo that Deutsche Bank is reprocessing a payment of the developer’s July earnings, which may result in two sets of payments being paid, one of which was issued in error.
“I thought [the higher payment] was because sales of my app surged, so I logged into my developer’s console where I found the amount of US dollars I received was exactly the same as the amount of RMB I should receive. I talked to some of my developer friends and found that many of them have received seven times their payment amount, not just me.”
—Zou Zhenlu, app developer (our translation)
Context: The payments to developers are generated from app sales, in-app purchases, subscriptions, sponsorships, and advertising after taking a 30% commission.
]]>Gionee, the Chinese smartphone maker which declared bankruptcy in December, has launched two smartphones in a bid to repay debts numbering in the billions of RMB.
Why it matters: Founded in 2002, Shenzhen-based Gionee was once one of China’s largest mobile phone makers. The company accounted for 4.7% of China’s mobile phone market in 2012 and had expanded to India, Southeast Asia, and Africa before it went bankrupt.
Details: The two handsets, the Gionee M11 and M11s, have been granted their network access certificates from the Telecommunication Equipment Certification Center of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology on August 29, its website (in Chinese) shows.
Context: In December, nearly 20 creditors filed a bankruptcy liquidation application to the Shenzhen Intermediate People’s Court against Gionee after months of talks with the smartphone maker failed to produce funds for repayments.
While almost all major handset makers present in China are busy with landmark product launches as the 5G era fast approaches, for one major vendor, the new technology’s advent represents a defining moment in its struggle to return as a major player in the industry.
The South Korean giant may sell more smartphones than anyone else globally, but in China, Samsung is little more than a bit player. The company made up less than 1% of the country’s total handset shipments in the second quarter with only 800,000 devices sold, market research firm Counterpoint found.
This is in sharp contrast to its performance in the country just a few years ago. In its glory days of 2013, Samsung led. It controlled nearly one-fifth of the rapidly expanding market and the companies devices became synonymous with high-end handsets among Chinese users.
The company’s China market share has now hovered around 1% for seven consecutive quarters.
Samsung’s decline coincided with the emergence of native smartphone players such as Huawei and Xiaomi, bringing fierce competition to the market. Consumers’ preferences in the country are also increasingly affected by political agendas. The company has been unable to maintain its position in the Chinese market, and experts maintain that there exists only a small possibility that it can return to its former glory.
“The mishandling of its Galaxy Note 7’s recall in China marked the beginning of Samsung’s demise in China,” said Will Wong, an analyst at market research firm IDC, referring to the numerous reports of devices catching fire in 2016.
First launched in late summer 2016, the 5.7-inch, stylus-toting high-end model was considered a strong competitor to Apple’s iPhone 7.
Within weeks of the device’s August launch, Samsung’s consumers around the world reported that phones were catching fire and some had even exploded. The incidents led to Samsung suspending sales on September 2 and commencing a global recall.
The recall involved 10 countries including the United States, South Korea, and Australia, but China, where the device went on sale on August 26, was not included. Samsung explained the decision stating at the time that Note 7 handsets sold in the country used different battery suppliers and did not pose any safety risks.
Samsung doubled down on this claim despite a claim (in Chinese) on September 18 that a Note 7 had “exploded” in a user’s hand. Samsung attributed the incident to “external heating.”
The statement didn’t include a recall for the country, and over the following weeks, there were more than 20 reports of Note 7 explosions in China in the coming weeks. Samsung finally announced a China recall on October 11.
In the minds of Chinese consumers, the eventual recall may have come too late. State broadcaster CCTV said in a documentary special (in Chinese) the next day that Samsung’s handling of the incident constituted “bullying” of Chinese consumers and a “violation” of their rights.
“It caused serious damage to its brand image in China, especially when it faced fierce challenges from other smartphone vendors,” Wong said.
The Note 7 recall incident also coincided with a wave of anti-South Korea sentiments felt across China in the second half of 2016 after the former agreed to deploy an American missile defense system despite claims from China that it could be used to spy on its territory.
In July 2016, South Korea and America announced plans to deploy the so-called Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense system, or Thaad, to better protect South Korea and US troops in the region.
The plan faced stiff opposition from the Chinese government. Apart from diplomatic protests, Chinese state media also urged a boycott of South Korean products.
While the main target of the boycott was Lotte, a South Korean supermarket chain that provided land for the Thaad deployment, it also spread to a wide range of products and services associated with the country including group tourism trips, kimchi, Korean barbecue, and Samsung phones.
The yearlong dispute between South Korea and China ended in October 2017 when the two nations agreed to cast aside tensions over Thaad and move on with economic cooperation. But the impact of the dispute among consumers didn’t fade away so quickly.
Samsung’s smartphone market share in China fell from 5.5% to around 1% in 2017, and it has not been able to recover its position since then.
“When consumers are able to choose between domestic and foreign products, they often prefer domestic ones, and the tendency becomes more noticeable when their societies are perceived as under threat from the outside,” said Yu Jinmao, a professor at Jiangsu University.
“Samsung’s market performance in China was certainly affected by the dispute between China and South Korea, and this is in line with the downward demand trend for South Korean products such as cosmetics,” he said.
Ever since the end of 2017, Samsung has repeatedly stated that it aims to return as a major player in China. And recently, the company has laid a bet on 5G.
“We are back!“ was the message from Kwon Gyehyun, president of Samsung Electronics China, at the launch event for the A8s handset at the end of last year. However, Kwon’s enthusiasm has not translated into major growth in sales in the country and market share continued to stagnate in the first half.
The firm more recently has turned to 5G-ready devices. Last month, Samsung launched its first 5G-enabled smartphone, the Galaxy Note 10+ 5G, on the Chinese market.
“The Note10 + 5G is the beginning, our goal is to get more advantages in the Chinese 5G market,”said Kwon at the lastest product unveiling. “We have invested almost all of our resources in 5G, and we hope that will help us to regain our market position.”
The new handset, priced at RMB 7,999 (around $1,118), is RMB 1,800 more expensive than Huawei’s equivalent 5G model. “One of the advantages Samsung has is that Chinese consumers still regard it as a premium brand, and it has a long history of operating in China,” said Wong.
The efforts made to maintain Samsung’s high-end image appears a wise choice. The company has a share of around 6% in terms of phones priced above RMB 4,000, according to data from Sino-Market Research.
“These efforts may leave Samsung with only a fraction of China’s smartphone market, but there still exists a small possibility that it could return to the top five vendors in the country,” he said.
]]>Singapore-based cryptocurrency exchange Huobi announced on Tuesday that it is moving into the blockchain phone space with the launch of an Android-based mobile phone, the “Acute Angle,” made by Whole Network, a blockchain project partly funded by the company’s venture capital arm, Huobi Capital.
Why it matters: While blockchain phones are still a niche product that likely appeals primarily to cryptocurrency traders, the entry of large companies into the space including Samsung, HTC, and China Telecom along with smaller players including Swiss-based startup Sirin Labs, indicates that this could change.
“As the industry develops and as innovations like 5G become increasingly integrated into our telecommunications systems, we believe more and more crypto communities will want to trade and transact from mobile devices.”
—Livio Weng, Huobi Global CEO, said in a statement to Coindesk.
Details: The new Android-based blockchain phone is already available in China, but Huobi plans to officially launch on September 11, the same day as the launch of Whole Network’s NODE token.
What to expect: Huobi plans to launch the blockchain phone in Southeast Asia in the fourth quarter. It also has plans to bring it to Europe and the US in the future, the company said, though it did not specify a timeline.
Context: Founded in 2013, Huobi quickly attracted a horde of Chinese retail investors and at one point was the largest cryptocurrency exchange in China by trading volume. China’s tightened grip on cryptocurrency activities in 2017 drove the exchange to the more crypto-friendly Singapore.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi announced on Tuesday a plan to repurchase up to HKD 12 billion (around $1.5 billion) worth of stock in an effort to halt a dramatic decline in share value, which have fallen nearly 50% from its July 2018 initial public offering price.
Why it matters: The growth prospects of the Beijing-based company have been dented by a slowing global smartphone market as its efforts to reinvent as an internet company rather than a hardware manufacturer has struggled to take hold.
Details: The board of directors believes that a share repurchase will broadcast the company’s confidence in its own business outlook and prospects, and will benefit the company as well as its shareholders, said Xiaomi in a statement (in Chinese) filed to the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong on Tuesday.
Context: Xiaomi chairman and CEO Lei Jun, as well as chief financial officer Chew Shou Zi, had pledged earlier this year that they wouldn’t sell their Xiaomi shares for another year to stabilize its stock price.
Huawei could delay sales of its upcoming Mate 30 flagship smartphone overseas due to its lack of Google services amid the US trade ban, the South China Morning Post reported citing people familiar with the matter as saying.
Why it matters: Prospects for Huawei’s smartphone business remain uncertain under the cloud of US sanctions on the world’s second-largest handset seller.
INSIGHTS: Supply chain body blow: Huawei’s reliance on US tech, charted
Details: The 5G-enabled handset will continue to run on the Android operating system, but it won’t have access to Google services along with apps such as Google Play and Google Maps, said the report. The planned delay is not final and any further action by the US government may affect Huawei’s decision on the release.
Huawei is pushing forward with the launch of a new flagship smartphone in Europe even though Google apps and services may not be on offer, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing company executives.
Why it matters: The new 5G-capable Mate 30 is Huawei’s first flagship handset launch since the US government placed it on a trade blacklist in May. The new smartphone will not feature HarmonyOS, Huawei’s self-developed mobile operating system, signaling that the world’s second-largest smartphone maker is not yet ready to break with Google.
Details: Huawei is set to unveil the Mate 30 line for phones on September 18 in Munich, Germany, according Reuters citing a source familiar with the matter, though it is unclear when the devices will go on sale.
“Our new phones will still be based on Android…We want to maintain one standard, one ecosystem, one technology.”
—Vincent Pang, senior vice president and board director at Huawei
Context: Huawei smartphone sales in Europe tumbled 16% year on year in the second quarter, though it retained its position as the second-largest smartphone vendor in Europe with 8.5 million units shipped during the period ended June 30.
China’s search giant Baidu has surpassed Google as the world’s second-largest smart speaker seller during the second quarter after its sales surged 3,700% annually to 4.5 million units, according to a new report from research firm Canalys.
Why it matters: In the two years since smart speakers first debuted in the domestic market, it has evolved from a niche gadget into one of the most popular electronic devices in Chinese households.
Details: The global smart speaker market grew 55.4% year on year in the second quarter to reach 26.1 million shipments, said the report.
“Local network operators’ interests on the device category soared recently. This bodes well for Baidu as it faces little competition in the smart display category, allowing the company to dominate in the operator channel.”
—Cynthia Chen, Canalys research analyst
Context: The growth of the Chinese smart speaker market has been a result of a price war between these Chinese vendors that slashed the average price for the gadget to below $20.
Apple is testing advanced screens from leading Chinese display maker BOE for iPhones next year, as the United States tech giant attempts to cut costs and reduce reliance on South Korea’s Samsung, the Nikkei Asian Review reported on Wednesday.
Why it matters: If Apple chooses BOE’s screens, the Chinese state-owned company could begin to challenge Samsung’s supremacy in the display panel sector.
Details: Apple is “aggressively testing” BOE’s flexible organic light-emitting diode, or OLED, displays, and will decide by the end of this year whether to take BOE on as a supplier of this single most expensive component, said sources quoted by Nikkei.
Context: An OLED display is the most expensive component on the iPhone. It accounts for nearly 30% of the total cost of the iPhone X released in 2017 and was sourced from Samsung.
NTT Docomo said Tuesday it will again accept orders for Huawei’s P30 Pro handsets after it delayed the launch of the phone following the United States export blacklisting of the Chinese telecommunications equipment maker in May, according to state-run news agency Xinhua.
Why it matters: Docomo is the third major Japanese carrier, including SoftBank and KDDI, to have resumed sales of Huawei phones.
No matter how long the reprieve, Huawei still has no alternatives to US tech
Details: Docomo said it will resume taking orders for Huawei P30 Pro smartphone starting Wednesday. The device is scheduled to go on sale in Japan in September.
Xiaomi Tuesday reported its revenue grew 15% year-on-year in the second quarter as the Chinese smartphone maker is selling more higher-priced handsets.
Why it matters: The Beijing-based company is sharpening its focus on the fast-growing premium handset segment as the global smartphone market continues declining.
“We are at the eve of explosive growth that will be brought by 5G and we are now in the period of a series of brand adjustments…Xiaomi will invest more in the research and development of middle-to-high-end handsets before the 5G era comes.”
Chew Shou Zi, chief financial officer at Xiaomi, in a conference call with analysts on Tuesday
Details: The company’s revenue in the second quarter rose to RMB 51.95 billion from RMB 45.24 billion a year earlier.
Context: Xiaomi spun off its Redmi, a sub-brand for its budget phones, in January in a bid to focus on the premium handset market.
Huawei has been given another 90-day reprieve that allows the Chinese telecommunications equipment giant to purchase components from United States companies to supply existing customers, the US Department of Commerce announced on Monday.
The extension of the reprieve “is intended to afford consumers across America the necessary time to transition away from Huawei equipment, given the persistent national security and foreign policy threat,” said the department in a statement.
While renewed access to US suppliers has given Huawei more breathing room, a closer look at Huawei’s smartphone supply reveals glaring vulnerabilities. Despite its efforts to find alternative sources or build in-house replacements, the hardware giant still relies heavily on American sourcing.
On May 16, the Trump administration put the company on a trade blacklist barring it from buying parts and technology from American companies. The US government then issued a “temporary general license” for exports to Huawei to maintain its existing production, effective from May 20 through August 19.
Under the shadow of US sanctions, Huawei reported a 23.2% year-over-year increase in revenue for the first half of the year last month.
But the company was not cheered by the growth. Chairman Liang Hua warned that its consumer business, which contributed 55% of revenue in the first half, would face huge difficulties in the following months.
In January, the company announced its ambitions to overtake Korea’s Samsung to become the world’s biggest-selling smartphone vendor by the end of this year. The company surpassed Apple in smartphone sales last year after shipping over 200 million units.
However, in June, Huawei announced that it had given up on fulfilling this ambition because of the US sanctions.
That same month, Bloomberg reported that Huawei was preparing for a 40% to 60% decline in international smartphone shipments.
Analysts have attributed the loss of international market share to Google’s restriction on Huawei’s access to its Android operating system and apps. A recent teardown, however, of Huawei’s newest 5G-enabled handset shows that some US-made components are also critical for Huawei’s smartphone production.
Most of the parts found on the motherboard of Huawei’s Mate X 20 5G are made by the company’s in-house chipmaker HiSilicon and other Asian manufacturers. There are, however, a few key components that enable the phone’s 5G connectivity are made by US companies, according to iFixit, a computer repair company based in the US.
The teardown shows that the phone’s radio frequency (RF) front-end chips, the key communication module that connects a phone between the RF transceiver and the antenna, are made by two American companies.
These include a middle/high-band front-end module made by Qorvo, a North Carolina-based chipmaker, and a low-band front-end module made by the Massachusetts-based Skyworks.
It could prove hard for Huawei to find alternative sources to these components. According to Southwest Securities, a Chongqing-based securities firm, the market is currently dominated by Broadcom, another American semiconductor manufacturer, Skyworks, and Qorvo with market shares of 29%, 28%, and 18% respectively.
While these three American companies have a combined 75% share of the RF front-end chip market, the third-largest player, Japanese electronics company Murata with 22% of the market, is also likely to be bound by the US restrictions.
The Tokyo-based company, whose 5% of sales come from Huawei, said in May that it had been looking into the implications of US ban on Huawei, according to the Japan Times.
“American suppliers usually have more advantages in some key components for 5G phones, such as RF front-end chips,” said Will Wong, a Singapore-based analyst at research firm IDC.
“I believe Huawei can find alternatives to these RF front-end chips, but it will take time for it to find sources that can compare favorably with American supplies in terms of stock and quality,” he said.
Though US-made components only make up a fraction of the Huawei phone, they contribute to a large proportion of the phone’s costs. Another teardown by Tokyo-based research firm Fomalhaut Techno Solutions of Huawei’s P30 Pro, the company’s newest flagship model, shows that while US components account for less than 1% of the phone’s parts, those components add up to over 16% of the cost of all parts, according to Nikkei Asia Review.
Despite being granted the extended reprieve, the cloud of uncertainty still hangs over Huawei.
In addition to the Monday announcement, the Commerce Department also added another 46 Huawei affiliates to the entity list, hinting that the US government is not completely dropping the pressure on the company.
Before the first 90-day reprieve’s expiration, Huawei on August 9 unveiled its long-awaited in-house mobile operating system HarmonyOS, which many have speculated will be their Android replacement.
At the launch of the new OS, Huawei’s consumer business group chief Yu Chengdong demonstrated a wide range of devices on which the company plans to install the system, including personal computers, smartwatches, and virtual reality glasses.
But he didn’t mention any plan to install it on smartphones. Later, he told reporters that HarmonyOS is ready to run on phones and migrating from Android to HarmonyOS would only take a few days if the company had to.
Huawei didn’t want to harm its relationships with Google at that time since the results of the US restrictions were still uncertain, according to Wong.
That uncertainty also dampened consumer confidence in overseas smartphone markets, said Wong, adding that consumers don’t want to run the risk of losing access to popular Google services on their Android phones.
Huawei’s smartphone shipments in Europe tumbled 16% year on year in the second quarter, according to market research firm Canalys. By contrast, the company’s smartphone sales in Europe saw a 50% yearly surge in the first quarter.
The dramatic decline has indicated how smartphone consumers are sensitive to such uncertainty, given that Huawei’s smartphones were not affected by the US in most of the time in the second quarter.
“Huawei will find it difficult to operate in the overseas smartphone markets in the short term, no matter how the US ban ends up with,” said Wong.
]]>The effects of the US-China trade war on the global supply chain for consumer electronics are beginning to show, reported Bloomberg on Thursday. Many manufacturers are moving operations out of China amid the uncertainty.
Why it matters: The conflict between the world’s two largest economies is not only affecting manufacturers in China and US farmers, but is also disrupting the decades-old global electronics supply chain that produces iPhones, laptops, and 4K televisions.
Details: Some firms are uprooting production lines from China amid concerns that the tensions show no indication of cooling, Bloomberg reported.
Lenovo’s net profit more than doubled in the first fiscal quarter to beat analysts’ estimates, although the world’s largest PC maker warned that uncertainty lies ahead due to trade frictions between the US and China.
Why it matters: Lenovo’s business performance could suffer going forward due to President Trump’s threats of new tariffs on Chinese goods.
“There is a complexity of macro risks arising from ongoing trade negotiations, import tariff changes implemented by countries and challenges alongside geopolitical uncertainties.”
—Lenovo’s earnings statement for the first fiscal quarter for 2019-2020
Details: Net profit at Lenovo surged 111% to $162 million in the first fiscal quarter, beating analysts’ average estimate of $154 million, while revenue rose 5% to $12.5 billion.
US sanctions on Huawei are beginning to impact the Chinese firm’s business in key markets as handset sales in Europe tumbled 16% year on year in the second quarter, according to a report from market research firm Canalys released on Monday.
Why it matters: While sales at home surged on patriotic support for the Shenzhen-based firm, demand among European consumers waned after products were cut off from future updates for Google’s Android operating system amid US sanctions.
Details: Despite the drop, Huawei retained its position as the second-largest smartphone vendor in Europe with 8.5 million units shipped in the quarter, trailing South Korea’s Samsung with 18.3 million units.
“Samsung has been quick to capitalize on Huawei’s US Entity List problems, working behind the scenes to position itself as a stable alternative in conversations with important retailers and operators,”
— Ben Stanton, Canalys senior analyst
Context: Huawei unveiled an Android alternative called HarmonyOS last week, and claims that switching handsets to the new operating system would take only a few days if necessary.
Huawei’s Hongmeng may not replace Android on smartphones after all
Huawei on Friday unveiled its long-awaited self-developed operating system HarmonyOS on its smart television product, but it may not be an Android alternative as previously rumored.
Why it matters: HarmonyOS, also known as Hongmeng OS, was deemed to be Huawei’s alternative to Google’s Android after the Chinese firm was cut off from US technology. The debut of the operating system was on Huawei’s TV set, but it is not yet available on smartphones.
“HarmonyOS is completely different from Android and iOS. It is a microkernel-based, distributed OS that delivers a smooth experience across all scenarios.”
— Yu Chengdong, at the Huawei Developer Conference on Friday
Details: Huawei said HarmonyOS will be open source and the firm will establish an open-source foundation and community to support developers.
HarmonyOS is ready to run on phones, but “for the consideration of partnerships and the ecosystem,” Huawei won’t be using it on handsets just yet, said Yu, adding that migrating from Android to HarmonyOS would only take a few days.
The current version of HarmonyOS is based on open-sourced frameworks and some self-developed modules, but future versions will be entirely developed in-house, said Yu.
Context: The mysterious operating system has been at the center of rumors regarding Huawei’s so-called ‘plan B’ against US sanctions. The company’s executives have given inconsistent statements about the OS in recent months.
Transsion, the Chinese handset maker dominating sales in the African market, has restarted efforts to go public on China’s Nasdaq-style stock market after the process was suspended on Tuesday. The company is coming under mounting scrutiny from securities regulators.
Why it matters: The setbacks provide a broad hint that the registration-based listing system for the STAR Market maintains a high listing threshold despite efforts to convince high-tech companies to list domestically.
Details: The SSE website showed Transsion’s IPO application as “suspended” on Tuesday, meaning the financial statements filed were no longer valid.
Context: The Shenzhen-based company enjoyed a combined 48.7% share of Africa’s mobile phone market last year thanks to its Itel, Tecno, and Infinix brands, according to research firm IDC. It also led the African smartphone market with a 34.3% share, followed by South Korea’s Samsung with 22.6% and Huawei with 9.9%.
Chinese smartphone maker ZTE sold the country’s first 5G-enabled smartphone on Monday ahead of a national rollout of 5G wireless networks this year, media outlet Jiemian reported.
Why it matters: The battle for China’s 5G smartphone market has intensified as smartphone makers scramble to offer cutting-edge devices.
Details: The first 5G smartphone, ZTE’s Axon 10 Pro, was sold at a retail store of e-commerce firm Suning.com in Beijing on Monday morning, said the report.
Context: China is determined to build the world’s biggest 5G networks by making sure its state-owned carriers have access to bandwidth for 5G networks for nominal fees as well as inexpensive equipment.
Apple shares rose 4.4% intraday on Wednesday after the company’s financial results for the third fiscal quarter beat Wall Street estimates thanks to a “marked improvement in greater China,” according to CEO Tim Cook.
Why it matters: China has been a problem market for the US firm as iPhone demand has waned amid strong competition from domestic challengers such as Huawei and Xiaomi. However, Apple’s measures to boost sales, including price cuts, have borne fruit.
“I’d like to provide some color on our performance in greater China, where we saw significant improvement compared to the first half of fiscal 2019 and return to growth in constant currency.”
Tim Cook at Apple’s Q3 2019 earnings call on Tuesday.
Details: Apple’s revenue across greater China, which includes mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, fell 4% to $9.2 billion in the third fiscal quarter ended June 29, after declining 22% in the second.
Context: Apple’s smartphone shipments in China declined 14% after hitting 5.7 million units in the second quarter, according to Canalys.
Qualcomm and Tencent are cooperating on projects to optimize user experience for the Chinese company’s video games on devices powered by the US firm’s chips, as well as on creating a 5G version of a Tencent-backed gaming phone, they said on Monday.
Why it matters: Tencent, one of the world’s largest gaming companies, is seeking new areas for growth as gaming revenues flag amid increased scrutiny by Chinese authorities.
Details: Under the agreement, future Tencent games will be optimized for Android phones that run Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Elite gaming chips, the companies said.
Chinese smartphone manufacturers continued to see explosive growth in India during the second quarter, edging out international competitors as they battle for market share in the world’s second-most populated country, according to data from research firm Canalys.
Why it matters: Chinese smartphone makers are looking abroad to boost sales while shipments in their home market slow as a result of high rates of smartphone penetration and a slowing economy.
Details: Four of the top five most popular smartphone brands in India are Chinese. Xiaomi takes the top spot, controlling nearly a third of the Indian market, up 4% year on year, according to the Canalys report released on Monday.
“[Vivo’s] current trajectory would see it displace Samsung by the end of 2019, dealing a major blow to the Korean vendor.”
—Jin Shengtao, Canalys analyst
Context: Chinese smartphone makers are increasingly relying on international sales in order to offset stalling shipments in China, the world’s largest smartphone market.
Vendors in China have shipped 190 million smartphones in the first half of the year, a decline of 6% over the same period last year, according to a report released on Thursday by market research firm CINNO Research.
Why it matters: China, the largest smartphone market in the world, has seen smartphone shipments decline for six consecutive quarters due to high rates of market penetration, and a slowing economy amid the US-China trade war.
Details: Huawei continues to lead the smartphone market with sales up 18.1% in the first half of the year, securing 34.3% of market share, while smartphone shipments for its smaller rival Xiaomi fell 20% year on year during the same period.
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi was the youngest company on the Fortune Global 500 list in 2019, placing 468th in the world with 2018 revenue of $26.4 billion, but is facing slowing smartphone sales and sinking share prices since its 2018 initial public offering (IPO).
Why it matters: It took Xiaomi nine years to grow from a startup to one of the world’s largest corporations by revenue, but since its July 2018 listing in Hong Kong, its shares have fallen more than 45.8% and market cap has shrunk by HK$162 billion (around $20.7 billion). Its reputation has faltered from one of China’s rising technology stars that aimed for a $100 billion IPO to a hardware manufacturer facing slowing demand for its main product as it struggles to pivot to other businesses.
Details: Xiaomi joined a number of other Chinese tech companies on the Fortune list, on which Shenzhen-based telecom equipment giant Huawei was ranked 61st, e-commerce giant Alibaba ranked 182nd, and social media and gaming giant Tencent 237th in the world by revenue.
Context: Though the smartphone segment comprises the lion’s share of its revenue, Xiaomi has been expanding into other businesses to shore up growth and broaden its profile as an internet company, not just smartphone maker, for a higher valuation.
Huawei is among the first batch of smartphone makers to receive official safety accreditation for upcoming 5G-capable handsets, along with OnePlus, ZTE, and Vivo, reported National Business Daily.
Why it matters: Securing the permits means the companies are a step closer to launching their respective next-generation smartphones, a widely anticipated catalyst as sales decline in markets across the globe.
Details: Seven 5G handsets have received China Compulsory Certifications, a safety accreditation for products sold on the domestic market, from the China Quality Certification Center.
Context: The race to deliver smartphones compatible with 5G networks has begun as companies eye fresh opportunities in a saturated market.
Huawei announced on Monday that it would unveil a smart television product in August, according to Chinese media outlet Yicai, a move that broadens the Chinese telecom giant’s business into the TV-related sector.
Why it matters: Huawei is expanding its consumer business into other hardware segments as governments in countries around the globe scrutinize its telecom equipment over cybersecurity concerns and smartphone sales decline after it lost access to Android following a US trade ban in May.
“TV has its irreplaceable advantages. TVs and smartphones will work as two centers in people’s daily lives.”
—Zhao Ming, president of the Honor smartphone line, as quoted by China Daily
Details: The new TV product, which Huawei calls a smart screen, will be sold under the company’s Honor smartphone brand.
Context: Huawei’s consumer business relies heavily on American technology and components, but the company was recently granted some reprieve from US sanctions.
Huawei still prefers Google’s Android mobile operating system (OS) for its smartphones over its own self-developed Hongmeng OS, according to company chairman Liang Hua, following an announcement on Tuesday that the US government would significantly narrow the scope of its ban on the Chinese telecom giant.
Why it’s important: It had long been suspected that Huawei was developing its own mobile operating system, named Hongmeng, as an alternative to Android by the time Google pulled Huawei’s license to some services in order to comply with a US trade ban on Huawei in mid-May.
Details: Liang said on Friday at a press conference in Shenzhen that the Hongmeng OS was developed for the internet of things (IoT) devices instead of smartphones, and the company hasn’t decided to abandon Android.
While Amazon dominates the US smart speaker market with its Alexa-powered devices, competition in China remains fierce as some of the country’s biggest names in technology engage in an ongoing price war to vie for market share.
China supplanted the US as the largest market for smart speakers globally earlier this year. Sales hit 10.6 million units in the first quarter, a recent report from research firm Canalys shows. The country accounted for just over half of all sales of the devices globally in the first three months.
In the two years since their emergence in the Chinese market, smart speakers have evolved from niche gadgets into some of the most popular electronic devices among Chinese households. Their meteoric rise has been the result of a price war between some of the country’s biggest tech players that slashed average prices to under $20. While experts contend that the low pricing strategy may help educate consumers, there are concerns that the low-end devices could fail to meet users’ expectations.
Amazon introduced a new means of human-computer interaction in 2014 when the company launched its first Echo smart speaker, running Alexa. Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak lauded Echo as the “next big platform” in computing in an interview with CNBC in 2016.
After that, US tech giants piled in, with Facebook, Microsoft, Google, and Apple all announcing smart speaker products in the following years.
Major Chinese players like Alibaba, Baidu, and Xiaomi, joined the party in mid-2017. Sales skyrocketed from a mere 60,000 units in 2016 to 9 million last year, making the country the largest market worldwide, according to a report by German market research firm GFK.
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba launched its first smart speaker Tmall Genie in July 2017, allowing users to order items from its Tmall premium shopping site from the comfort of their sofas.
Tmall Genie, which uses the Hangzhou-based firm’s intelligent personal assistant service AliGenie, initially went on sale for RMB 499 ($72.5). The price was low compared with the first generation Amazon Echo, which sold for around $180 but the market reaction was lackluster. Sales of AliGenie only numbered in the several tens of thousands, Chinese online media outlet Qdaily reported in November 2017. However, fortunes changed when Alibaba slashed prices for the annual Singles’ Day shopping festival on November 11 that year.
The company sold the speakers for RMB 99 via coupons and discounts, an 80% reduction of the original price. By the end of the 24-hour shopping festival, Tmall Genie had become the first smart speaker on the Chinese market to hit 1 million unit sales. This compares with total smart speaker sales in the country of 1.65 million units for the whole of 2017.
By March 2018, Alibaba had accumulated 2 million sales, a feat that had taken Amazon over one year to achieve with its Echo.
In the same month of Tmall Genie’s initial launch, Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi joined the battle releasing the Mi AI Speaker. The product is capable of controlling other smart products around the home via voice assistant Xiao Ai.
The RMB 299 smart speaker hit the market in September 2017. Xiaomi said all stock sold out from the Beijing-based company’s online store 23 seconds after release, though it didn’t reveal how many were actually snapped up.
In March 2018, Xiaomi launched the Mi AI Speaker Mini, a low-end version of its original product, priced at RMB 169. For its annual Mi Fan Festival on April 3, Xiaomi cut the price to RMB 99, achieving parity with Alibaba’s Tmall Genie.
The low pricing strategy drove up sales significantly. Xiaomi said that more than 1 million users registered to buy the product during the festival.
The company sold 600,000 smart speakers in the first three months of 2018, reported Canalys. This number more than tripled to 2 million in the second quarter, installing the firm as China’s second-largest smart speaker vendor after Alibaba.
November 2017 marked the entry of a major new player when Baidu launched its Raven H product. The name derived from Raven Tech, the AI assistant startup that the search engine giant acquired in 2016.
Priced at RMB 1,699, Raven H was almost 10 times more expensive than other products available in the country and it failed to gain a foothold in the market. A report from The Information in June 2018 states that Baidu only manufactured 10,000 Raven H smart speakers, which is in sharp contrast to the several million units sold by both Xiaomi and Alibaba.
The failure led to Baidu pursuing the same strategy as Alibaba and Xiaomi. The firm unveiled its Little Fish smart speaker brand in March 2018, powered by its conversational AI assistant DuerOS. The device was priced at RMB 599 but was sold at a promotional price of RMB 299. In June 2018, the company launched a cheaper version of the device, which brought the price down to RMB 89.
The strategy paid off and Baidu became China’s third largest smart speaker maker after Alibaba and Xiaomi, with shipments of 1 million devices in the third quarter, Canalys data shows.
Behind the price war, there is a booming market for smart speakers. Canalys expects in April total units sold to hit 59.9 million at the end of this year, growth of 166% compared with the year-ago figure.
“The benefit of the price war is that it brings high market penetration in a short time, and it will be an effective measure for educating consumers,” Liu Hao, a researcher at the China Consumer Electronics Association, told TechNode.
“But the low pricing strategy won’t help the industry move forward; instead it will disappoint consumers’ expectations by selling them cheap stuff,” he said.
David Watkins, director at Strategy Analytics, told TechNode that Google and Amazon sold their devices at a very low cost to accelerate user number growth and now Chinese players are looking to replicate this success with even more aggressive promotions and deals.
“Given the sudden growth in sales in China over the last few quarters I would say that they are proving successful,” said Watkins.
Canalys predicts that smart speaker penetration will reach 13% this year though this is dependent on the ability of companies to win over new users, according to Watkins.
At the end of last year, Amazon and Google cut the prices of their smallest smart speaker products, the Echo Dot, and the Home Mini, to as little as $29 from $50 for the shopping season, reported Reuters.
The report indicated that the respective component costs of the two devices were around $31 and $26, respectively, and the figures didn’t include overheads, shipping, and other expenses, meaning they were likely sold at a loss.
Although Xiaomi aims to lower the threshold for smart speakers by providing products at low cost, the company does not aim to pursue loss leader pricing–sell at a loss to attract consumers, Tang Mu, the general manager of Xiaomi’s smart hardware division, told TechNode.
“Loss leader pricing is not a reasonable business model, because it means high expectations for future market volume, and the smart speaker market has not yet reached that stage,” Tang added.
Chen Xiaoliang, founder and CEO of SoundAI, a voice recognition technology provider for Xiaomi and Baidu’s smart speakers, told TechNode that the low-pricing strategy was a better way of marketing than advertising because smart speakers are still a new concept in China.
However, the country’s smart speaker makers are not as ambitious as their US counterparts because they have different purposes, he added.
“Chinese companies are selling smart speakers as a potentially profitable product, but they don’t envisage a scenario in which smart speakers represent the main focal point of people’s interaction with machines,” said Chen.
Voice interaction is the most natural way of asking and searching for answers, he said. “Amazon is ambitious because it is determined to dethrone Google as the top search engine, which would save it billions of dollars in search engine advertising.”
Watkins of Strategy Analytics still contends that Baidu and Alibaba share similar ambitions to Amazon and Google. “They see AI assistants as the next computing platform, and if they want to remain relevant then they must build a strong presence in that space.”
Companies in both China and the US alike have to evolve their products based on changes in consumers’ behavior as they moving away from desktop and touchscreen interfaces toward more direct voice-activated platforms, he said.
]]>Samsung estimates operating profit more than halved in 2nd quarter – Financial Times
What happened: Samsung Electronics expects its second-quarter operating profit to fall 56% year-on-year to KRW 6.5 trillion (around $5.55 billion), according to earnings guidance released by the company on Friday. The South Korean electronics giant said its revenue would likely fall 4% quarter-on-quarter to KRW 56 trillion. It will release a finalized earnings report later this month. The lowered earnings guidance came as global chip prices fell due to a supply glut and US sanctions on China’s Huawei, a major Samsung client, analysts said.
Why it’s important: Samsung is the world’s biggest maker of semiconductors and smartphones, as well as a major producer of display screens. The US campaign against Huawei has hurt chip demand, but Samsung is expected to see benefit in smartphone and telecom equipment sales. Analysts estimate Samsung could sell 37 million more smartphones annually if the Huawei woes continue. Samsung is also expected to increase its share of the global 5G network equipment market as global telecom operators boycott Huawei.
]]>1.9 billion 5G smartphones will ship in the next five years, overtaking 4G in 2023 – Canalys
What happened: A report by research firm Canalys said 5G-enabled handsets will reach nearly 800 million units in 2023, accounting for 51.4% of all smartphone shipments. Greater China, which includes mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, will account for 34.0% of 5G smartphone shipments in 2023, followed by North America at 18.8%. Additionally, 17.5% of smartphones shipped in China will be 5G-capable by 2020, and this percentage will rise sharply to 62.7% in 2023. Canalys said government initiatives to accelerate 5G development are a powerful driver for faster roll-out in markets such as China and the US.
Why it’s important: Following South Korea, the US, Australia, and the UK, China is expected to begin commercial use of 5G nationwide on October 1. Earlier this month, China’s three major state-owned carriers China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom were granted commercial 5G licenses by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. Top smartphone makers including Samsung, Huawei, Xiaomi, and Oneplus have already announced that their 5G handsets will be ready for consumers in 2019, and Apple’s 5G-enabled iPhone is expected to launch in 2020.
]]>Xiaomi has sold more TV sets online than any other brand in China for two consecutive quarters, Li Xiaoshuang, general manager of Xiaomi TV & Air Conditioning Department, said Tuesday in Beijing.
The Chinese smartphone maker released Tuesday its latest 65-inch Mi TV model named “Mural” (our translation), featuring a customized Samsung 4K panel with a flat back that can be hung on an indoor wall like a painting. Priced at RMB 6,999 ($1,040), it is also Xiaomi’s first TV model equipped with its XiaoAI virtual assistant, which allows users to control the TV using natural human language from a distance of up to 10 meters and without the aid of a remote control.
According to market research firm China Market Monitor, Xiaomi has become the top TV seller for online sales channels for two consecutive quarters beginning October 2018. It accounted for 22.7% of total market sales volume in the first quarter this year, beating Hisense (14.5%) and Skyworth (12.1%), the two established manufacturers that rank first and second place in the offline market.
Also included in the launch were also a new standing air conditioner model C1 for RMB 3,499, a RMB 1,799 treadmill and an electric fan, all of which can be controlled using voice recognition technology. The raft of new products mark the company’s latest push to conquer consumer living rooms using its artificial intelligence of things (AIoT) initiative.
The Beijing-based company launched its “smartphone + AIoT” dual-engine strategy in January announcing that it will invest RMB 10 billion to shore up its internet of things (IoT) ecosystem over the next five years. Television, thanks to a big screen and frequent user interaction, is one of the most strategic consumer electronics products in its ambitious AIoT plan, Xiaomi founder and CEO Lei Jun said.
Chinese smartphone makers, including Huawei and Oppo, are piling into the home intelligence market, as global smartphone shipments decelerate further. Xiaomi sold 118.7 million units with a 29.8% year-on-year increase in 2018, while fourth quarter shipment declined 12.3% compared with the same period a year earlier. By contrast, Xiaomi smart TVs shipment rose sharply in 2018, surging 225.5% year on year to 8.4 million units.
]]>Xiaomi has revealed its total sales revenue in overseas markets over the past seven years. The total amounted to $15 billion while Xiaomi also found itself on the top in the Spanish phone market, Wang Xiang, the company’s global business head and senior vice president, at Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona on Sunday. Prior to that, the company had only revealed audited revenue figures for the past three years in its IPO prospectus.
Despite its flagging sales in the domestic market, the Chinese phone manufacturer witnessed a rapid surge in sales revenue in internationally. In the third quarter of 2018, it reached RMB 22.3 billion (around $3.33 billion) with an 112.7% year-on-year increase, making up 43.9% of its total revenue over that period.
“We spent 15 months becoming the Number One in the open [channel] market in Spain,” Wang said, adding that he expected Xiaomi’s global sales to quickly overtake its performance in China in terms of revenue, as globalization has been one of the company’s “major driving forces.”
Chinese phone manufacturers are upping their global efforts amid a slowing smartphone market. Huawei, Oppo, and Xiaomi all released their first 5G handset models at MWC over the weekend. Huawei’s first foldable Mate X pits it against Samsung’s Galaxy Fold, with a starting price of €2,299 (around $2,600) targeting the first wave of high-end 5G users.
Oppo, on the other hand, is expected to ship its first batch of 5G smartphones to European consumers ahead of Chinese buyers this year, as the company has “made the fastest progress” in Switzerland (in Chinese) with local telecom service provider Swisscom.
At the launch event for its latest flagship model Mi 9 last week, Xiaomi founder and CEO Lei Jun said the company’s main overseas target this year would be Europe, adding that “the US market could wait.” It is also looking to expand its business in Africa by forming an Africa-focused business unit at the beginning of this year.
Figures from research firm Canalys show that Samsung and Apple remain dominant in the European smartphone market with shares of 28.7% and 26%, respectively, in the fourth quarter of 2018. Market share for Huawei and Xiaomi were 23.6% and 6%, respectively.
]]>Huawei’s new foldable phone will top both Apple and Samsung in price, costing around $2600 – CNBC
What happened: At an event at Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona on Sunday, Huawei launched its first 5G foldable smartphone, the Mate X. It can fold into a 6.6-inch smartphone and unfold into an 8-inch tablet, which runs on its in-house Kirin 980 processor and Balong 5000 chipset allowing for 5G. With a starting price at €2,299 (around RMB 17,500 or $2,600), Huawei’s first 5G foldable phone would be able to download a 1-gigabyte movie in only 3 seconds, said Richard Yu, head of Huawei’s consumer business group.
Why it’s important: Foldable smartphones are creating a buzz in the consumer electronics sector, and Huawei looks to show its leadership in flexible display technology as well as 5G. Huawei surpassed Apple to become the world’s second-largest handset maker last year. Digitimes cited industry sources as saying the Chinese telecommunication giant eyes to ship 250 million phones this year and replace Samsung as the world’s largest smartphone maker. Huawei Mate X marks the company’s latest move to seize the initiative amid the global 5G roll-out race.
]]>Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has restructured its mobile phone business group amid increased competition in the Chinese market, Tencent Tech reports (in Chinese). The move comes one month after the company spun off its budget smartphone sub-brand Redmi.
A new advisory team will be set up under the smartphone business group and led by Zhu Lei, formerly head of sales, combined with an operational team controlling product expenses within the company. Chinese media cited Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun as saying that the restructuring aims to enhance the company’s operation and strategy in its smartphone business.
At the same time, Xiaomi established a department to conduct research and development into new technologies for touch control of mobile phone displays. Lei Jun made the announcements in an internal letter to employees. A Xiaomi spokesperson confirmed the moves to TechNode.
The restructuring follows reports that Xiaomi is abandoning its flat management structure as a means to revive its flagging sales. Xiaomi is reportedly seeking a more systematic organizational structure. An anonymous employee told Caijing that the company is trying to be “more regulated,” and that it has been looking for reasons for its unsatisfactory performance. Xiaomi co-founder Wang Chuan immediately denied the claims.
Despite its overseas success, Xiaomi’s smartphone business has stumbled in 2016, witnessing a 36% decrease in shipment volume compared to the same time period last year. According to research firm the International Data Corporation, Xiaomi’s sales bounced back in 2017 with a 12.4% market share and 32.6% annual increase in shipments, before it decelerated a year later, reaching only 1.3% year-on-year growth in 2018.
]]>雷军:小米9不仅最好看 而且非常能打 – Netease Tech
What happened: Xiaomi has announced they will reveal their flagship model Mi 9 on Feb. 20 in Beijing. Rumors put the starting price at RMB 2999 (roughly $440). Mi 9 will be the “best-looking Xiaomi smartphone model so far”, the Chinese smartphone maker claimed in a WeChat post (in Chinese) on Wednesday. The upcoming flagship will also reportedly be the first model from Xiaomi powered by Qualcomm’s latest processor Snapdragon 855 and comes with three cameras in the back.
Why it’s important: China’s smartphone market has been increasingly competitive for foreign players, as the top four brands are all Chinese in terms of market share. Figures from research firm IDC show that Huawei, OPPO, vivo, and Xiaomi made up roughly 78% of the China market in 2018, up from 66% in 2017. To be released as Samsung’s Galaxy S10 in the US, the Mi 9 will be yet another premium model for Xiaomi, an area where they’ve historically been weak.
]]>Xiaomi has sold 1 million units of its new device Redmi Note 7 in the first month since its launch, as local smartphone makers now scramble to set up new sub-brands amid slowing demand.
“Our new strategy of multiple brands have achieved initial success, considering the great sales results of Redmi’s first smartphone model after independence,” Xiaomi said in an announcement (in Chinese) on Tuesday. It claimed the Redmi Note 7 smartphone sales has crossed 1 million units in mainland China region as of Feb.12.
Xiaomi’s share rose about 5.28% by noon on Wednesday. After the initial IPO frenzy, the company’s stocks have fallen below its initial offering price for over six months.
The Chinese smartphone maker announced on Jan.10 that it was spinning off its lower-end Redmi product line as an independently operated sub-brand. This was followed by the launch of Redmi Note 7 in Beijing five days later, featured a 48-megapixel camera and Qualcomm Snapdragon 660 chipset with a starting price of RMB 999 (around $147).
Redmi Note 7 was sold out of all 100,000 units in about 10 minutes during the first day before it went up for sale again on Jan.18. Xiaomi said the popularity made it believe its brand proposition with cost-efficient products “will be even more compelling in current market conditions.”
Competition in the Chinese smartphone market picking up, as Huawei, Xiaomi, and Oppo have increased their attempts by operating multiple brands. Vivo followed the path by unveiling new sub-brand iQOO on Tuesday, aiming at the higher range of the smartphone market.
According to research firm International Data Corporation (IDC), despite a 10% overall decline in shipment volume in China in 2018, the country’s telecom giant Huawei increased shipment volume by 43.9% year-on-year to 60.5 million over the fourth quarter, compared to 1.4% of Xiaomi and 6.8% of Oppo for the same period.
Huawei Honor president Zhao Ming said on microblogging platform Weibo (in Chinese) in late January that the company had achieved a global sale of 1 million units of its flagship model Honor V20, “far more than they expected.”
]]>Judge in Huawei Hearing Not Satisfied With Meng Bail Conditions – Bloomberg
What happened: A Canadian judge has voiced dissatisfaction over a bail proposal by Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou’s lawyers. The proposal stipulates that Meng’s husband Liu Xiaozong could act as “surety,” making sure Meng fulfills her bail terms by standing to lose up to $11 million in cash and property should she violates the conditions. Defense lawyers also demonstrated how Meng could be tracked by GPS and put under 24-hour surveillance as a measure to prevent her from fleeing.
Why it’s important: Justice William Ehrcke of the British Columbia Supreme Court said that Liu, who is in Canada on a multiple-entry visitor visa that expires in February, might not even be in the country for extradition proceedings. Interestingly, the Huawei executive is willing to pay for her own surveillance should she be released on bail. The high-profile case has stoked US-China trade tensions and rocked stock markets on both sides of the Pacific.
]]>If you can’t see the video above, try watching here instead.
The flip phone has made a comeback.
Royole Corporation, a 6-year-old startup, has become the first company to commercially release a smartphone with a foldable screen. Their product, the FlexPai, launched on October 31, besting Samsung, which is still teasing a release of their own foldable phone.
TechNode got a hands-on look at the FlexPai Tuesday during TechCrunch Shenzhen, where Royole Chairman and CEO Bill Liu said that while the FlexPai is a novelty, the company envisions the product as a practical solution.
“People always want portability and large screen visual experience and that’s exactly what FlexPai can do,” he said. “People are interested in this new product not only because of the novelty. Novelty eventually has to serve for human needs.”
]]>China’s smartphone market is down 13% year-on-year amid its fourth consecutive quarter of year-on-year declines.
According to a report by market research firm Counterpoint Research, overall sales have not been optimistic, though Huawei and Honor saw double-digit growth compared to the same time last year. Chinese manufacturers filled the ranks the top five brands. The most popular was Vivo, taking nearly 20% of the market in the third quarter, followed by Oppo, Honor, Huawei, and Xiaomi, collectively making up 78% of the market.
Apple saw its year-on-year growth decline by 17% and made up just 7.7% of the market. The company saw sales decrease following the release of the iPhone XS and XS Max. Counterpoint says this was due to the price of the devices.
According to Counterpoint, the strong performance from Vivo, Huawei, and Honor are as a result of product innovation, which includes AI processors and the introduction of flagship-like features to cost-effective devices.
However, analysts believe this all may change in the fourth-quarter of 2018, which is seen as a time for promoting more expensive flagship devices during a host of shopping festivals. Sentiment is expected to shift from a price war to that of a battle between premium devices. As an example, Apple topped over smartphone makers regarding sales on Tmall during Double11. The company also commands 65% of the market for smartphones priced at more than $600.
Huawei, which overtook Apple in Q2 to become the world’s second largest smartphone manufacturer has begun focusing on the premium market. This is especially true in India, where the company plans to start manufacturing phones from 2020.
In April, smartphone shipments in China dropped to under 100 million for the first time since 2013. The decline was attributed to rampant imitation and intense competition, contrary to Counterpoint’s report, which associated strong performance in the top 5 brands with innovation.
]]>Research highlights class divide between ‘poor’ Apple iPhone and ‘rich’ Huawei users in China – SCMP
What happened: Chinese iPhone users are less well-off than individuals who use other phone brands, including Huawei and Xiaomi, according to research firm MobData. The company found that iPhone users are perceived to be part of a group called the “invisible poor,” those who don’t look as poor as the reality of their financial situation. The research found that most iPhone users are unmarried females who make less than RMB 3,000 ($433) a month, while Huawei buyers are usually married males who earn between RMB 5,000 and RMB 20,000.
Why it’s important: Apple usually raises the price of its iPhones every year, pushing users to cheaper alternatives. The move has driven users to buy older iPhones, such as the 6, 6S, and 6S Plus, as well as second-hand iPhone models. Apple has been struggling to get a foot up on its competitors in China, where it controls just 9% of the market. The company has reduced orders from two component suppliers in China after its slightly lower-priced iPhone XR model failed to perform.
]]>Xiaomi takes over Meitu’s struggling selfie-focused phone business–Engadget
What happened: Meitu has announced that it’s entered a strategic partnership with popular smartphone brand Xiaomi. The company best known for its photo-editing app will hand over much of its phone operations to Xiaomi while taking charge of developing image algorithms and tech. Officially, Meitu’s smartphones will get new opportunities for growth while Xiaomi can upgrade its ‘photo experience’ and reach a broader female user demographic.
Why it’s important: The partnership may allow Meitu to play to its strength: enhancing selfies for a largely young, female audience. Business has flagged recently, in part due to demand for a more ‘natural look.’ On top of smaller losses last year, Meitu expects a net loss between RMB950-1,200 million this year. Partnering up with Xiaomi, which reported a net profit this year, may shore up Meitu’s mission to continue spreading its beautifying effects to an ever-wider audience.
]]>On Tuesday, Umeng.com (友盟+) released a report on China’s smartphone market that reveals Oppo and Vivo, along with Huawei and its sub-brand Honor, dominated the domestic field from January through August of this year.
Apple wasn’t left entirely in the dust but the next-best foreign competitor, Samsung, didn’t make much of an impression in the rankings. According to Umeng’s chart of the top six smartphone brands, Oppo and Vivo were nearly head-to-head with 20.7% and 20.1% of the market, respectively.
Apple follows with a respectable 14.2%, trailed by Huawei. However, if Huawei and its ranking sub-brand Honor are combined, they beat out all other competitors with 22.6% of China’s smartphone market.
Together the top 6 brands took up a large majority of the entire market, fluctuating between a low of 82.6% and a high of 89.6%.
Image credit: Umeng.com
Umeng also ranked brands in order of new users, user retention, and a “competitiveness” measure based on the two previous values.
While Oppo and Vivo proved the strongest in attracting new users, Apple still outranked all other players in terms of user retention, despite a drop from last year. That gave it a boost in the competitiveness chart, where its 79.9 rating fell not far behind Vivo and Oppo.
Image credit: Umeng.com
Huawei, Xiaomi and Honor made up the next tier of top-rankers, while 360 vied with OnePlus, Smartisan, and Meizu (in that order) in the third tier.
In terms of the “competitiveness rating” of individual phone series, Vivo’s X and Oppo’s R ranked the highest, followed by the iPhone 7 line. Huawei and Xiaomi series performed similarly, lagged by Honor and in last place, Meizu.
Image credit: Umeng.com
In the overall market, Umeng reported that new smartphone prices fell mostly in the under-RMB 3,000 range, although RMB4,000-5,000 and under-RMB 1,000 saw new growth.
Not-so-surprisingly, phones and screens in the domestic market have continued to grow in size. Over one-half of new phones from January through August are 5.6 inches or bigger, while some 79% had screens that took up over 70% of the phone body.
Image credit: Umeng.com
And finally, new phones have seen an upgrade in features despite overall “sluggish” growth. Demand for NFC is gradually growing in first-tier cities. Front-facing cameras are now higher-quality than before, most likely reflecting the demand for better-looking selfies.
]]>Huawei’s Mate 20 flagship seen as crucial to showcase its tech prowess against rivals Samsung and Apple – South China Morning Post
What happened: China’s leading smartphone maker and 5G solution provider Huawei will soon release flagship Huawei Mate 20 series, the most expensive and up-to-date series produced by the company. A highlight of the new phones is Huawei’s very own Kirin 980 chip, a demonstration of the country’s chip production and R&D capability, and a potential bargaining chip to bring Huawei to the world’s premium phone club dominated by Apple and Samsung. Pre-orders will start at 10:08 am, October 17.
Why it’s important: The sales performance of the new Huawei Mate 20 series deserves attention, as the release closely follows Apple launch of the new phone model. In 2018, in terms of total handset shipment, Huawei already surpassed Apple as the second best (behind Samsung) company in the world, prior to Apple’s new release a few weeks ago. Meanwhile, amid Sino-US trade tension, a phone series with China’s own chip has strategic meaning: a demonstration of tech power, an announcement of non-dependence in the phone-making field, and a new test field and infrastructure building for Beijing’s upcoming 5G practices.
]]>China’s smartphone shipment plummeted 11.5% YoY to 36.75 million handsets in September this year, data from China Academy of Information and Communications Technology shows. The dip continues a downward trend in the industry, which recorded a 17% drop in the first nine months of the year.
The first nine months of this year have recorded a consecutive two-digit decline in smartphone shipment as compared with the same period of 2017, with an exception of May, which witnessed a 1.2% jump, the report pointed out. This February was hit by a striking 38.7% YoY decline.
Local smartphone companies take a lion’s share in the market with 34.45 million handsets sold in September, representing 88.3% of the total shipments. Android phones are still dominating China, accounting for 89% of total smartphones shipped.
China’s smartphone industry is increasingly a battlefield for the incumbents. CAICT reports show that the combined shipment of the top-10 smartphone manufacturers accounts for a dominating 92% of the total shipments in the reporting period, an 8% just over the same period of last year.
Saturating market and rising average selling price of the devices are the major reasons for the decline, a local report says, citing IDC research analyst Anthony Scarsella. But he thinks customers are still willing to pay for quality devices even it’s for a higher price. This means there are still opportunities for companies that can come up with innovations either in the product or in marketing model.
Despite a sluggish domestic market, there’s a silver lining in the smartphone market while local smartphone makers are finding increasing presence in emergent markets. Southeastern markets, like India, have been a top priority for Chinese smartphone makers over the years. Meanwhile, they are also gaining momentums in Russia, middle east and Latin America.
Although Chinese companies are finding their way globally, they still playing catchup to the world’s top phone makers. Samsung and Apple topped the global smartphone shipment list in September with 27 million and 19.19 million and 18.28 million, data from research institute Sunrise Big Data shows.
Chinese smartphone makers took four out of the top-6 smartphone maker list where Huawei, Oppo, Xiaomi and Vivo followed closely with 18.28 million, 11 million, 10.33 million and 10.28 million respectively.
]]>Chinese smartphone brands’ market share in Russia has reached a new high of over 40% in September, according to a recent report released by M.Video-Eldorado (in Chinese), Russia’s largest consumer electronics retailer by revenue.
Chinese brands have been exerting their influence in the global smartphone market as the domestic market becomes increasingly saturated. Russia has emerged as one of the new frontiers for Chinese brands. Previous data from M.Video-Eldorado showed that Russian smartphone market grew by 22% in monetary terms in the first three quarters of 2018 with its market size reaching $4.7 billion.
In 2017, Chinese smartphone makers already managed to secure three of the top spots in shipments to Russia. From June to September of this year, every third smartphone purchased in Russia was a Huawei or Honor (a smartphone brand under Huawei) device. The two brands have shared the top spot in retail sales in Russia, overtaking Apple and Samsung. Xiaomi, another Chinese smartphone maker, took the fourth spot. In June, reports showed that Huawei smartphones took up 26.5 % of market share in Russia, surpassing former lead Samsung’s 23.2%.
Chinese smartphone brands have gained a foothold in lucrative markets like Russia and India largely through aggressive pricing strategy—offering cheaper phones than other global competitors.
Even so, China-made phones have been facing pushback in some markets, most notably from the US.
After Huawei’s partnership with US telecom carrier AT&T fell through in January, consumer electronics retailer Best Buy announced plans to stop selling Huawei phones.
Huawei says roadblocks to US market are being constructed by its rivals
In August, President Trump signed a bill banning government agencies and its contractors from using Huawei and Chinese telecom giant ZTE’s technology amid concerns over Chinese vendors posing a security threat to the country. Austrailia has also banned Huawei from supplying equipment for the new 5G networks due to security fears.
]]>If you can’t see anything above, try watching here instead.
For OnePlus, one is enough.
The company, founded in Shenzhen in 2013, tends to introduce only one new model each year. This year, they’ve tasked that phone — the OnePlus 6 — with the near impossible: compete with the iPhone X on style, compete with the Galaxy S9 on performance, remain number one in India’s premium phone market — and do it all for less than $600.
Does this cost-conscious premium phone live up to expectations? John Artman reviews.
]]>Samsung may suspend operations at China mobile phone plant: report – Reuters
What happened: Samsung is considering suspending operations at its Tianjin factory due to faltering sales and rising labor costs. The electronics giant also noted that market conditions will likely remain challenging throughout the rest of 2018 amid pricing competition and new product launches.
Why it’s important: Last month, Samsung posted disappointing quarterly earnings which showed the slowest quarterly profit growth in more than a year. The electronics giant is struggling to maintain its title as the world’s largest smartphone vendor facing rivals like Huawei who are set to take the throne it with cheaper handsets. The Tianjin factory is one of two in China. In recent years, Samsung has invested more heavily in production facilities in Vietnam and India.
]]>Nine of the world’s twelve most shipped smartphone manufacturers are headquartered in China, according to semiconductor market research firm IC Insights.
The company recently updated its 2018 IC Market Drivers Report in which it documented the applications fueling demand for integrated circuits (ICs). According to the report, Apple and Samsung still dominate the market for high-end smartphones (over $200). The two companies combined shipped over 530 million smartphones in 2017, controlling 36% of the market share.
While these two companies controlled the high-end range, their shipments saw little growth. However, Huawei, OPPO, Vivo, and Xiaomi, coming in at third, fourth, fifth, and sixth on the list respectively, witnessed between a 10% and 73% increase in shipments.
The combined shipments by OPPO and Vivo, both owned by BKK Electronics, fell short of Apple’s shipments by just 2.7 million units. Chinese companies on the list shipped a total of 626 million smartphones in 2017, an 11% increase compared to 2016. They also controlled 42% of global smartphone shipments.
Nonetheless, Lenovo, ZTE, TCL, Gionee, and LeEco/Coolpad saw their shipments drop by up to a quarter.
Growth in shipments from Chinese manufacturers is being driven by the international market, with total shipments increasing by 47% in 2017, according to market research firm Newzoo. The company claims that India is a significant driving force behind the increasing demand, with the usage of Chinese-made devices rising by 225% between 2016 and 2017, and accounting for 37% of all smartphones in the country at the end of 2017.
While global shipments of Chinese smartphones are on the rise, local shipments are down. According to Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) data, domestic shipments slumped by over 16% in the first-quarter of 2018 to 39 million handsets. Technology market research firm Canalys documented a similar trend, saying that eight of the county’s ten major manufacturers experienced declines in shipments. The firm attributed the decrease to rampant imitation resulting from competition in the market.
]]>“Lenovo phone business in China has sunk to the bottom, and thus we have no fear anymore” Yang Yuanqing, CEO of Lenovo, said to a Chinese reporter on May 24 (our translation). “But, we’re far from giving up. This is part of the strategy.”
In 2017, Lenovo Group’s revenue hit $45.4 billion, a 5.38% YoY increase. However, it’s mobile business revenue was $7.2 billion, a 16% decrease year-over-year.
Lenovo’s unsatisfactory phone business is not new news. The company acquired Motorola—a former tradition communication device giant—but found it hard to improve market performance.
According to data quoted by China’s mouthpiece Xinhuanet.com, in 2017, Lenovo sold 49.7 million smartphones worldwide. Among them, only 1.79 million smartphones were purchased by domestic consumers (in Chinese). During the first quarter of 2017, Xiaomi alone shipped 8.9 million smartphones in China. Huawei, in the same year, shipped over 153 million smartphones globally.
“We have voluntarily withdrawn from around 70 to 80 countries – mainly small countries. [But] we have similar thought on big markets, which is: we want to profit in every market [we choose to enter],” Yang said. “The Chinese market is the only one in the world that holds increasing rich investment. And because of this, players can survive even while losing money.” Yang added, “The Chinese market is too important, too big. Though we’re in a loss, we will increase investment.”
But Yang’s words are not simply marketing cliché. Firstly, Lenovo’s core business is not smartphones. The company’s profit and strength lie in PC and laptop unit. According to Lenovo, their PC business has overtaken HP as the new world number one. Meanwhile, Yang’s thoughts on China’s business context are not wrong. To secure the market and attract new partners, material sacrifice is part of the game.
The timing of when people shift attention to Lenovo is also interesting. Between high-end Apple and Samsung and middle-to-low-end Huawei, Vivo, Xiaomi, and now OnePlus, Lenovo’s phone has never been in an easy situation. If the weak phone performance is not new, why is the news now so hot?
Chinese media reported the company had an “unpatriotic 5G standards vote” during a meeting held in the US in 2016. Liu Chuanzhi, the founder of Lenovo and a man whom entrepreneurs in China call “Godfather”, responding to overwhelming criticism, said the unpatriotic charge was part of a broader conspiracy.
Though financial numbers have no connection with nationalism or patriotism, Lenovo has to face intensifying market attention directly.
]]>Smartphone shipments in China dropped to 91 million units in the first quarter of 2018, representing the largest single quarter decline on record. This is the first time since the end of 2013 that shipments have fallen below 100 million units.
Technology market analysis firm Canalys said eight of the ten major smartphone manufacturers were hit with annual declines. The company said the record-breaking slump is due to rampant imitation resulting from intense competition in the market.
Smartphones manufacturers Gionee, Meizu, and Samsung were hit the hardest. All three vendors’ shipments fell to less than half of their respective Q1 2017 numbers.
Samsung was recently banned from selling a number of its handsets in China after a court ruled that it had infringed on Huawei patents. Even so, Huawei saw a 2% decline in shipments after overtaking Apple to become the world’s second-largest supplier of smartphones in September 2017. Oppo and Vivi also had a bad quarter, with both suppliers experiencing a 10% decline in shipments.
Xiaomi was the only manufacturer to defy the trend, growing its shipments by 37% to 12 million units. The company overtook Apple to become the country’s fourth-largest smartphone supplier.
“Xiaomi is the only vendor in the top-5 that is focused on the sub-RMB 1,000 (about $160) price segment and it owes close to 90% of its shipments to Redmi,” said research analyst Hattie He. The company is trying to shake its budget smartphone image and recently announced it would limit its net profit margins from its hardware sales to 5%.
The Chinese smartphone market is increasingly dominated by Huawei, Oppo, Vivo, and Xiaomi. All four companies saw their market shares increase, while other manufacturers, including Apple, lost footing.
Despite the decline, analysts expect the market to recover with the launch of flagship phones from Oppo, Vivi, and Huawei in the second quarter of 2018.
]]>When Apple released its Series 3 model this September, the cellular capabilities were the biggest selling point for the smart watch. It still is in most of the world–except China.
As furious early adopters are growing impatient after three months of waiting, Apple decided that Apple Watch Series 3 owners in China could return the product, unrestricted by the 14-day return policy.
After brief availability through telecom carrier China Unicom, owners of the new model found that cellular connectivity was cut off abruptly without a timeframe for comeback. The suspension of this feature last for a couple of months and there’s no sign that the ban will be lifted any time soon.
At the very beginning of Series 3’s release, Unicom specified the following: “Cellular service available only for mobile lines opened in Guangdong, Henan, Hunan, Shanghai, and Tianjin.” Apple updated the page with reference to support later in 2017 after the September 28 ban. Now, all Chinese carriers — China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom, show the support is coming in 2018, Apple Watch Series 3 cellular support site shows.
Now, Apple Watch Series 3 with LTE, which priced at RMB3188, is now no different to a more affordable Apple Watch Series 3 with GPS (RMB 2588).
The ban is essentially caused by the new technology that Apple uses in the Series 3 called an eSIM, a tiny chip that allows users to subscribe to any carrier they choose, and thus loosing the government’s ability in tracking the users.
]]>Users of Alipay, China’s top mobile payment solution provider, can now make purchases by scanning their faces with the bezel-free iPhone X.
Alipay announced on November 28 that iPhone X’s Face ID has become available on its latest version. The payment giant’s arch-rival WeChat Pay already started implementing Face ID into its payment system shortly after iPhone X’s China release last month. The most common payment authentification methods have been passwords and fingerprints.
The much anticipated face recognition payment technology, however, has not saved Apple from its tanking sales in China. iPhone is losing its charm as a symbol of status amongst the Chinese middle class as Chinese manufacturers like Huawei and Xiaomi are making quality phones at more affordable price tags.
“Compared to several years ago, I think the iPhone may be less of a status symbol, but that all depends on who you talk to,” said Jessica Rap, Senior Writer at Jing Daily which follows China’s luxury market.
Despite the cold response from consumers, the Chinese press and social media saw a buzz around the face recognition technology since its debut. Discussions range from how safe Face ID is, to the tongue-in-cheek inquiry into whether Face ID is capable of distinguishing between two twins.
Alipay first revealed its face recognition payment solution during the Singles Day shopping spree on November 11 last year. Face recognition has also won the hearts of the government as the technology enables a more efficient nation-wide surveillance system.
]]>iPhone X has hit the shelves in Mainland China, but it remains to be seen if Apple’s new flagship will win the hearts and minds of the Chinese people. This, however, will likely more depend on changes within consumers themselves rather than the actual technology the new iPhone X is offering.
iPhone has long been the phone in China. Men bought iPhones to propose to their girlfriends (and got turned down), Chinese nouveau riche, derogatorily called “tuhao,” bought golden iPhones to match their golden Ferraris, shopping platform Taobao hawked Apple-branded toilet seats, lighters, and slippers–this was the power of Apple in China. Chinese consumers have earned the reputation of having a “keeping up with the Joneses” mentality caused by increasing wealth and standards and this has served Apple well. But this time, the new iPhone is priced double than the average salary in China.
“Compared to several years ago, I think the iPhone may be less of a status symbol, but that all depends on who you talk to,” said Jessica Rap, Senior Writer at Jing Daily which follows China’s luxury market. “Chinese consumers now have more options when it comes to phone tech. Discerning Chinese consumers, in general, are becoming less focused on branding and more concerned with quality buys. When local phone companies like Huawei and Xiaomi are offering similar technology for a much more affordable price point, it leaves consumers more money to spend on other purchases, especially when phones like the iPhone X are priced so high.”
Despite that, Rap did mention that Apple has remained among top gifts for gifting among Chinese millionaires just after Bulgari, according to the Hurun Report published earlier this year. This goes along with some commentators’ claims that the iPhone X will sell like hotcakes regardless of the price. Tech In Asia editor Charles Custer has said that Apple probably isn’t ever going to become the top smartphone seller by units sold again. It will, however, regain its crown as the ultimate status-symbol phone. Maybe they won’t get it in “tuhao gold” anymore, but “yuppie black.”
Of course, it would be very wrong to say that the sole source of Apple’s status in China is its potential to show off. iPhone is a great product after all, and many have recognized that. Apple has also made it hard to escape its ecosystem once you’re there.
“I found that the people I talked to tend to love the iPhone more or less because they’re hooked on the phone or the brand itself, so they ‘have to’ have the next one regardless of the price,” said Rap.
China has also imported from the US a somewhat puzzling reverence towards Steve Jobs and the brand he built. Apple fans are a strong bunch in China. Technology lovers too. But even among them, there are many who are reluctant to cash out $1000 for a new iPhone model.
“I know many of my friends placed an order when the pre-order was available,” said Kai, a long-time Apple buyer and technology writer. From his own point of view, getting a new phone seems unnecessary. He also doesn’t believe that iPhone is so much about status anymore.
“The iPhone showed up in Chinese market 10 years ago, I don’t think there are a lot of Chinese customers buying iPhone to show their economic capabilities. For example, the 11.11. [Double 11 or Singles’ Day, a shopping festival organized by Alibaba] is coming and Xiaomi and Huawei both show a larger influence than Apple in the smartphone industry,” he said. “Because of this, iPhone X truly has new and advanced technologies, but whether it can be applied in most of our day-to-day life and whether it is worth paying the highest price in the history for that, I hold a negative view.”
iPhone has indeed been falling behind other players in the Chinese market. Huawei recently surpassed Apple’s smartphone sales by shipping over 112 million phones in the first three quarters of this year. This is probably by far the loudest indicator that Chinese consumer are increasingly making more mature shopping decisions, and putting practicality before brand.
And while Apple fans are standing in line to buy their favorite product, another news that has largely flown under the radar are protests in front of Apple’s stores against the company’s labor malpractices during the past 10 years of iPhone production. Students & Scholars Against Corporate Misbehaviour (SACOM) an NGO based in Hong Kong have called on Apple to take action against corrupt trade unions, student intern abuses, and extremely low wages in Apple’s suppliers’ factories. However, this is unlikely to dent the enthusiasm for Apple in China.
]]>China’s early adopters who tried out Apple Watch Series 3 cellular connectivity with China Unicom are furious after connection failures and China Unicom’s passive reaction. The connection issue, however, seems to be China Unicom’s fault: they still have not gotten formal approval from China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology for “one phone number multi-device (一号多终端)” business, essential to support Apple Watch Series 3 cellular connectivity.
Tian purchased the Apple Watch Series 3 through Apple’s official website and China Unicom’s SIM card to pair with it. To his disappointment, after pairing China Unicom’s data service with Apple Watch, he couldn’t receive any calls.
“It’s been two weeks. I called China Unicom seven times, no use. I’ve also visited two China Unicom stores, got a new SIM card with same number, but still no use,” he told TechNode.
Apple announced in its official news room that customers will be able to order Apple Watch Series 3 (GPS + Cellular) beginning September 22 in China. At the beginning of the new Apple Watch Series 3 release, Apple said they would provide LTE cellular network via China Unicom in five areas in China, namely, Shanghai, Guangdong, Henan, Hunan and Tianjin on its official website.
Apple Watch’s network activation problem in China was first reported by Chinese media The Paper on September 23rd, saying a user that can not complete the real name authentication on Apple Watch 3. Only a week after Apple Watch Series 3 release, Apple’s official website has backtracked from its initial announcement and shows that China Unicom’s cellular network will be available later (今年稍后推出).
Apple Watch Series 3 users who purchased China Unicom SIM card failed to make phone calls using the watch and expressed their anger on Weibo.
“When I was buying the Apple Watch at Apple Store, it said Shanghai Unicom supports data service on the Apple Watch. Now that line is gone. So I’m definitely entitled to return the Apple Watch because it’s not working in the way Apple advertised it at the time point when I was placing the order. But the Watch is working fine, besides this issue, so I don’t want to return it,” Tian says. “If they haven’t tested it, they shouldn’t have advertised it.”
Zhongguancun Online’s interview with a China Unicom’s staff (in Chinese) explains the issue. Apple Watch Series 3 uses eSIM independent cellular data, which required access to China Unicom’s “one phone number multi-device (一号多终端)”. However, China Unicom’s “one phone number multi-device” has only received “probationary” license, and did not pass the formal approval of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. China Unicom had no way to handle large-scale use of China’s Apple Watch Series 3 users, and had to immediately suspend the service.
Both Apple and China Unicom have not yet given the official explanation on the cause of the connection failure. China’s Apple Watch 3 users rage over China Unicom’s poor reaction to the people who suffered loss by purchasing China Unicom’s SIM cards.
“I’m just angry at China Unicom’s ignorance and incompetence in reacting and solving this simple issue. If China Unicom was not prepared for the service, they shouldn’t have offered it in the first place,” Tian said. “I don’t even want to use data service on Apple Watch 3 any more. So disappointed. I just want my SIM card back to normal service.”
]]>So here comes iPhone X and iPhone 8, but none of them comes with real surprise other than making Apple’s smartphone lineup more complex than ever. Media outlets in China are also not so optimistic about the new model’s future, jokingly calling the iPhone X “a smartphone with hair bangs.” Here’s what China’s media are talking about the new iPhone lineup.
The Paper reports that the iPhone X is the most expensive iPhone in history but the Face ID and the Animoji features deserve some applause. The state-owned media Huanqiu reports that it’s complicated for consumers to choose from Apple’s lineup of eight different smartphone products, which may have gone off course from Steve Job’s principle “less is more.”
Huanqiu also suggests that Apple had led the smartphone innovation trend in the past, where the firm would announce some cutting-edge design which would inspire the industry until its big action the next year. However, over the past two years, Apple’s products seemingly see some lack of innovation. In general, Apple this time only shows off its Face ID and full-screen display technology and doesn’t show the world any significant breakthrough, Huanqiu suggests.
In addition, with Xiaomi launching this Monday its Mi Mix 2 that comes with a full-screen display, it’s fair to say that the era of “full-screen display” is here. Now, the iPhone X is equipped with pretty much the same type of display.
Huxiu, a Chinese media outlet, reports that both Apple and Xiaomi are playing with full-screen display setup and it’s the consumer’s decision to go with “bangs” or “a chin.” People in the industry are saying that Mi Mix 2 is like a smartphone coming with a chin, given its narrow bezel on the bottom of the phone body.
While the new iPhones will only be available weeks after the launch event, the scalpers are seeing some great opportunities to make a profit out of this. Local media reports that the pricing for a latest iPhone from a scalper might go over RMB 20,000 (roughly $3062). The high price tag of the iPhone X is indeed a legitimate concern for Chinese consumers, where local media are reporting that the new iPhone lineup comes with no surprise but the Face ID and the high price tag.
In fact, after Xiaomi announced Mi Mix last year, smartphones with full-screen displays has seemingly become the new fad, Huanqiu reports. Aside from Xiaomi, smartphone manufacturers like Samsung, Vivo, and Nubia are going to release their new models that come with full-screen displays. Samsung S8 has added in the facial recognition technique, and Vivo will equip its upcoming X20, which will be released in a few weeks, with the same technique, according to local media.
]]>Apple’s September event is always a big one that attracts the world’s attention—especially those from the world’s largest smartphone market: China. However, the high price tag this time may come as the main hurdle for the smartphone giant to pump its market share in China.
Apple just announced its latest lineup of smartphones. The new iPhone X is priced at RMB 8,388 (roughly $1,284) and RMB 9,688 ($1,483) in China, much pricier than those in the United States where it goes for $999 and $1,149. That’s almost double the average monthly salary of China.
Local media in China are reporting that the new iPhone lineup comes with no surprise other than the Face ID and the high price tag. Meanwhile, the iPhone 8 also doesn’t show much innovation compared to the iPhone 7, local media reports.
In fact, just a day before the iPhone reveal, the local smartphone manufacturer Xiaomi launched the latest Mi Mix 2, which also boasts its large full-screen display with a much lower price at RMB 4,699 ($719) for its most high-end model. The Chinese consumers indeed have many local smartphone options, and the Mi Mix 2 is among those to beat.
It’s worth noting that the Chinese leading smartphone maker Huawei has overtaken Apple in global smartphone sales since June, according to Counterpoint Research’s report. The report also suggested that the iPhone’s share of China’s smartphone shipments fell to 9 percent in the period of January to June, down from 14 percent in 2015, which was when iPhone 6 took over the country by storm.
The Cupertino-based firm has slipped to the fifth position in China, falling behind local rivals Huawei, Oppo, Vivo, and Xiaomi, Reuters reported. Given the high price tag of iPhone X, it remains uncertain if Apple can turn around its business in China this time.
]]>While spearheading aggressive forays into overseas markets, Chinese smartphone brands are also taking a firmer hold of the domestic market and eating into the shares of multinational phone makers like Apple and Samsung.
In 2016, a total of 559.7 million mobile phones were shipped in China, up 8.0% from the previous year, according to a report from the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology (CAICT). The number of new model releases reached 1,446, down 3.3 percent year over year (YOY).
Of the total amount, local smartphone makers have shipped 497.8 million units in 2016, up 16.1% YOY. The figure accounts for 88.9% of the domestic mobile phone shipments, higher than 85.0% one year ago.
The CAICT report shows that the number of new models released by local brands (1381 units) decreased by 2.5% YOY and represented 95.5% of the total number of new model release in the domestic market.
In wake of the smart and well-connected trend of phones, the market share of 4G and smart devices grow stably.
The country’s smartphone shipments surged 14.0% YOY to 521.6 million units in 2016, representing 93.2% of the total domestic mobile phone. Android still dominates China’s smartphone market with 425.4 million units shipped were based on the operating system.
A total 519.4 million or 92.8% of the total shipments in China support 4G networks, up 18.0 percent YOY.
The growth of local companies like Oppo and Vivo were the main contributors to the swift rise in shipments from domestic companies; both Oppo and Vivo drove sales with extensive offline retail outlets as well as innovations in design and key features.
Data from research institute Counterpoint shows that Oppo and Vivo have taken the top two spots in China’s smartphone market with 17% and 16% share respectively in Q3 2016, biting into the shares of Samsung, Lenovo, Xiaomi, Coolpad and Apple.
Apart from domestic market, Chinese smartphone brands are expanding quickly in overseas markets like Southeast Asia, Middle East, and Africa. In India, for instance, Chinese brands grabbed 50% of the $10-billion Indian smartphone market in 2016, biting into sales from top-selling competitors like Samsung.
]]>Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun wanted to make one thing clear when he spoke at the Summer Davos event in Tianjin on Monday: “Xiaomi was never meant to be just a smartphone vendor.”
The company, which rocketed to fame through mega-sales of budget smartphones, is now stepping back from its revenue-driving product, amid a stagnating smartphone market and increased competition form other local vendors, including Huawei.
Xiaomi has long maintained that they are selling an ‘ecosystem’ rather than hardware. On Monday Lei Jun hinted at what the future Xiaomi could look like, and it’s not a smartphone vendor.
“We are aiming to offer consumers a wide range of products at affordable prices,” he said. “We need about 40 kinds of electronic products to attract consumers to our online shopping platform and offline retail stores.”
It represents a major pivot in Xiaomi’s strategy. Not only did Lei Jun downplay the future of the company’s smartphone business, he also committed to a definitive offline strategy, something the company is famed for avoiding. During Xiaomi’s meteoric rise between 2012 and 2014, they became well-known for their frenzied online flash sales, which would sell out almost immediately.
The company also utilized multiple rounds of ‘crowdfunding’ as a promotional tool, boosting their online strategy. At the time Lei Jun himself was dubbed the ‘Monkey King’, humorously known for making his monkey subjects act crazy during mass sale events.
Two years later the smartphone market in first tier cities has slumped, and players such as Vivo and Oppo, who have a strong offline presence in China’s untapped smaller cities, are beginning to pull ahead.
In the vision Lei Jun laid out on Monday, Xiaomi will roll out around 1000 experience stores in the next three to four years. He likened the future Xiaomi to Muji, a popular minimalist Japanese variety store selling everything from stationery and kitchenware to clothing. The variety store analogy suggests that the Xiaomi of 2020 could very well marginalize the role of the smartphone. Xiaomi is working with around 50 companies currently, about 30 of which are still in stealth mode.
Lei Jun also noted that he “knew clearly that it would take 15 years for Xiaomi to go public, because the company’s business model is too complicated,” suggesting that the company is making room for some serious changes before planning a listing. Xiaomi was founded in 2010, which means we could be waiting another nine years for an IPO.
]]>Lenovo Group Ltd., China’s original computer giant and the world’s largest PC maker, announced the launch of a $500 million USD startup fund, as the company seeks to diversify their business amid stagnating smartphone and PC sales.
The fund, which will be managed internally by Lenovo Group, will search out investments in the artificial intelligence, robotics and cloud computing industries, the company’s vice president He Zhiqiang said at an event in Beijing on Wednesday.
Lenovo joins a handful of Chinese smartphone vendors looking to diversify outside of hardware in an attempt to chase profitability in a flat market. Both Lenovo and Xiaomi dropped from the top five smartphone vendors as of Q1 2016, according to a recent study from IDC.
Xiaomi has taken on a similar strategy, investing in up to 50 companies, up to 20 of which remain in stealth mode, with no current public exposure.
Lenovo has already invested $100 million USD in 30 companies according to their website. Current investments are mobile focussed, including smart home devices and games. The new investment appears to seek out more complex back-end technologies, that could potentially help the company diversify their core business.
A majority of Lenovo’s revenue is still generated from their personal computer business, though the company has acknowledged the rapidly slowing growth in the sector. In August 2015 they cut five percent of their non-manufacturing workforce as part of a $650 million USD cost cutting program.
The company recorded losses in late 2015 for the first time in more than six years, though returned to profitability according to their Q3 earnings reported this February.
]]>We all know that, sooner or later, the rising post-00s generation, kids born from 2000 to 2009, will eventually replace the older generations as the dominating force of internet. But the change seems to be coming upon us faster than expected.
During Asia Beat held on March 18, Wu Xinhong, founder and CEO of China’s leading photo app developer Meitu, shared a set of interesting data, giving us a peek into how this trend completely changed their the face of their company.
“In 2015, we noticed that China’s post-00s gen are surprisingly active on social networks. Their active degree on Meipai, a video editing app developed by Meitu, is three times that of the post-90s gen and five times that of the post-80s gen. It’s beyond our capacity to amass data from all companies in this sector, but this data alone is enough to underline the imminent exploration of the post-00 user group.”
In 2007, Meitu team developed a Mars Pinyin Input Method, which converts words and sentences into novelty tags. The service only took them three days to develop, but it brought over 40 million users, according to the company. The startup found that over 80% of the new users are post-90s youth who love to talk via QQ, group chat and QQ Zone.
“We found the post-90s users have passions for pursuing individuality. The Mars Input Method satisfied their needs for celebrating individuality, but there’s still another demand that remained untapped back then: photos”. Wu pointed out that keywords like “unorthodox photos” have high search rates, but the market is still vacant. Meitu launched MeituPic in 2008, and saw a quick spurt in followers, claiming to now have over 500 million users worldwide.
In 2015 we witnessed a boom in demand from the post-00 generation users, which will in turn bring a new opportunity for startups. This time the media has evolved to fast-steaming video, while the competition among photo editing apps has reached a feverish pitch.
The wide application of mobile broadband also set up a groundwork for the spread of video services, Wu noted. To tap this trend, Meitu launched their home-grown video editing app Meipai. Over the past year, video-related services have been a hot spot for both PC and mobile terminals, attracting the attention of users and capital.
This article is part of Technode’s coverage of Asia Beat, where Technode was a media and organizational partner. Translated from TechNode China.
]]>After a nerve-wracking two weeks for one of China’s biggest telecommunications companies, ZTE, it appears sanctions laid against them by the US will be temporarily lifted, easing diplomatic and commercial tensions between the world’s two biggest superpowers.
A senior official at the US Department of Commerce said on Sunday that the sanctions would be temporarily lifted this week, allowing ZTE to once again source components from the US.
The sanctions were put in place earlier this month following a statement by the US Department of Commerce which claimed the Chinese company had violated trade restrictions on Iran by re-exporting US made components to the black-listed country. The blacklist is designed to clamp down on companies that could potentially aid in the development of an Iranian nuclear program.
The restrictions barred ZTE from purchasing US components without going through a complex licensing process that would most likely be denied. The company uses several types of US technology, including Qualcomm chipsets in their smartphones.
ZTE lashed out at the restrictions while the Chinese Ministry of Commerce also expressed “resolute opposition” to the “severe” effects of the move. ZTE has suspended trading for two weeks now, and have pushed back the date for their end-of-year final report, as they reassess targets under the new conditions.
The relaxation of licensing restrictions is expected to be temporary, though it is a positive sign of progress in such a diplomatically sensitive case. More information will be released on the loosened sanctions later this week.
Technode reached out to ZTE to confirm the reports and we will update with any further details.
Chinese tech giant Lenovo is slashing over 3000 jobs in what CEO Yuanqing Yang calls a “tough market environment,” said the company on Thursday. Their Q1 earnings report showed a 51% drop in net income since the same time last year.
The company will cut one out of every 10 white collar jobs, totaling 5% of the company’s staff, in hopes of yielding $1.3 billion USD in savings annually. Lenovo shares fell by over 8% on Thursday following the release of the results showing a $300 million USD loss in its mobile division.
Lenovo acquired Motorola from Google last year, but the company has failed to thrive under its new management, with handset sales dropping by almost a third. Results from their PC division were similarly disappointing, declining by 7% over the last year.
Lenovo is taking a series of steps to combat market challenges, says the company, including a $600 million USD investment to consolidate the management structure between the Lenovo and Motorola smartphone divisions.
HTC, a competitor to Lenovo’s smartphone business, is also making major cuts following poor earnings. The company revealed that it would be seeking to cut operating expenses by 35% following $250 million USD after-tax loss.
It’s been a tough period for Chinese smartphone makers as demand has slowed in the first half of the year. Even market leaders Apple and Xiaomi have missed their estimates in the increasingly competitive landscape. Chinese players are now making a strong play to enter less-crowded emerging markets including India and Brazil.
Lenovo mentioned that currency fluctuations in Latin America had also taken a toll on their revenue, but that their efforts to extend globally had been generally supportive of the overall business.
Last quarter, we faced perhaps the toughest market environment in recent years…” said Yuanqing Yang, CEO and Chairman of Lenovo. “To build long term, sustainable growth, we must take proactive and decisive actions in every part of the business.”
@CateCadell
Image Credit: Shutterstock
]]>Xiaomi has just launched its beta US/Europe store, and appears to have already sold out. The store offered four of its most popular products in a push toward the western market. It’s is a soft entry for the company which hopes to add its phones and tablets to the same store once patent issues are resolved.
Despite their impressive rise to prominence, Xiaomi’s global expansion has come up against some significant setbacks. Late last year the Chinese giant was banned from selling its smartphones in India after Swedish-based Ericsson entered a patent infringement suit against their smartphones. Xiaomi has since successfully launched their phones and accessories in India, and is now the fifth-biggest smartphone vendor in the country.
Xiaomi co-founder Lin Bin has previously said that while intellectual property issues were one factor in their global strategy, it was not their biggest concern.
He also noted that Xiaomi is an internet company, and that it would continue to expand into areas outside of smartphones. Last week the company revealed that it had launched a money-market fund, Huoqibao, extending further into financial services.
The store launched with four of the company’s most sturdy products, including the Mi semi-open Headphones, their Mi Band activity and sleep tracker, and two sizes of portable Mi Power Banks (5000mAh and 10400mAh).
While Xiaomi’s branding periodically comes under fire for being too similar to Apple, their products have been met with generally positive reviews at home. They are quickly growing a reputation for offering premium versions of China’s cheap market favorites, including everything from air purifiers to Smart TVs.
Xiaomi seems to be taking a lean approach to its market exit strategy, only offering its smallest consumer gadgets to the west at this point. So here’s the rundown from the Chinese internet on the Xiaomi products you can pick up in the US and Europe as of today.
While Xiaomi’s headphones will be retailing in the foreign market for a meek $79.99 USD, back home they’re seen as a more premium offering at 500 yuan.
In numerous reviews, Chinese netizens even mention that the headphones are almost uncomfortably heavy given that they are made from more sturdy materials than their market competitors.
Reviewers also noted that the earphones struggled with low frequency sounds which is to be expected in such a cheap headphone. Despite this, it has been compared in quality to the Sennheiser HD 25-SP II, which retails for just under twice the price of the Mi Headphone.
Interestingly, a recurring theme in Chinese reviews of the Mi Headphones is the fact that their lower-premium pricing has sparked a new interest in sound quality for headphones coming out of China, meaning that buyers at home could become increasing more discerning. As one popular tech reviewer writes on Baidu-affiliated news site Hexun.com:
“I can’t really say it at this point, but I think Mi Headphone sales will certainly do well. It has definitely made more people interested in good sound quality for the entire headset industry, this is a good thing, kids”
As for Xiaomi’s Power Banks, the reception in the Chinese market has been overwhelmingly positive, despite the availability of many low-cost options on China’s various e-commerce platforms. They’ve performed well enough that we are already seeing some copies on the streets, even though that the have an equivalent retail value of just $10-14 USD.
The big flaw that reviewers point out is the fact that Xiaomi’s push into high-capacity power banks – with the recent release of their 10400mAH model – has given rise to a frustrating design flaw; they take a long time to charge themselves. According to user reviews, the average time to charge Xiaomi’s biggest pack, the 10400mAh, is between 6-7 hours.
On the positive side, the Xiaomi offerings are generally seen as a much safer option than other banks available when it comes to accidentally frying your devices. As part of their brand-expansion effort, Xiaomi has noted in their english store how many times the banks can fully charge various Xiaomi phones, despite the fact that the phones are not yet available.
The Mi Band features all of the expected features from health-tracker wearables today. Bluetooth capabilities, call alerts, sleep tracking and fitness tracking. The device itself is pleasantly minimal and the app is slick and easy to use.
This year netizens were surprised that Xiaomi, which is built on Android, had chosen to go for a dual iOS/Android approach to the Mi Band app. Though considering they are expanding overseas ahead of their smartphone counterparts, the Mi Band definitely benefits form its dual capabilities. Not to mention the fact that the iPhone is going head to head with Xiaomi in their home market.
After trying the band itself, I’d say it’s comparable in most functions to the first generation fitness trackers from the west. Chinese reviewers note that the data requirements when connected with bluetooth put a strain on most smartphones, and that constantly running the GPS capabilities has a toll on the battery life of even the best smartphones, much like existing trackers. While a comparison we ran between the Mi Band and a leading foreign brand showed an 800 step discrepancy, the consensus is that the price makes up for all flaws in the eyes of the consumer at just $14.99 USD.
As Xiaomi’s global expansion continues, it’s likely they will release more consumer goods in the US and Europe before they take the leap with their smartphones and tablets. On top of potential patent woes, the US is becoming a more marginal market for Chinese smartphone makers, who are seeing an increased uptake in South East Asian consumers as well as India.
In a recent interview with the BBC, Huawei chief executive Guo Ping said that their ban in the US market was “not very important.” As the world’s largest telecommunications equipment firm, Huawei and ZTE were blocked from the US market in 2013 over security concerns.
Image source: http://www.mi.com/en/index.html
]]>