Huawei Aims to Overtake Samsung and Apple

Jun 04, 2016

Executive leads the company’s consumer electronics business

 
Richard Yu on Friday in Hong Kong.
 
 
Richard Yu on Friday in Hong Kong. PHOTO: KENNETH LIM/FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
 
 

Huawei has been narrowing the gap with Samsung and Apple in the global smartphone market, whose growth is slowing. In the first quarter, Huawei’s smartphone sales volume increased 59% from a year earlier, while Samsung’s sales were little changed and Apple’s sales declined 14%, according to research firm Gartner Inc. Huawei’s market share in the quarter rose to 8.3%, behind Samsung’s 23% and Apple’s 15%.

While increasing its market share, Huawei has also been focusing more on high-end products, such as its latest flagship phone, the P9, which features a dual-lens camera it developed with German optics company Leica Camera AG.

“Our growth is mainly coming from the high-end, premium segment,” Mr. Yu said. “If you want to be the leading vendor, you have to lead in the high-end.”

Mr. Yu said that Huawei’s partnership with Leica is an exclusive long-term alliance and he expects the collaborations to continue at least for the next five years.

Huawei is also pushing further into new technologies such as virtual reality. Based on its partnership with Alphabet Inc.’s Google, which provides a VR software platform, the company plans to release a new VR-compatible smartphone this fall, Mr. Yu said.

Huawei has been investing heavily to beef up its patent portfolio in order to compete with Samsung and Apple in overseas markets. Last year, Huawei spent $9.2 billion in research and development, higher than the $8.1 billion Apple reported spending but below Samsung’s $12.5 billion.

While Huawei smartphones are finding buyers in many parts of the world, the company has a minimal presence in the U.S. market.

Huawei’s telecom networking equipment, such as base stations and antennas, has been effectively banned in the U.S. after a 2012 congressional report recommended that U.S. carriers avoid Huawei’s gear, citing concerns that it could be used by Beijing to spy on Americans. Huawei has repeatedly denied such allegations.

Mr. Yu said that the U.S. cybersecurity concerns about Huawei’s networking equipment won’t affect the company’s efforts to sell smartphones in the market. “Consumers only want to have better products,” he said.

Mr. Yu said Huawei is in discussions to sell smartphones through U.S. telecom carriers, without disclosing any specific product launch plans.

At home, Huawei and other Chinese smartphone makers are grappling with a slowdown in domestic sales as the market becomes saturated. The country’s smartphone shipment growth slowed to 2.5% last year, compared with 63% in 2013, according to market research firm International Data Corp.

The cutthroat competition has also been fueled by the entry of new players hoping to replicate the success of Huawei and Xiaomi Inc. Speaking at the Converge conference, Pete Lau, founder and chief executive of smartphone maker OnePlus, said China is “a very cruel market.”

Mr. Lau said OnePlus, a small player by volume in China’s smartphone market, has taken a hard look at its product strategy and decided to keep a narrow focus on its strength: high-end smartphones.

Source: TWSJ


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