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HUAWEI TOPS GLOBAL TELECOM EQUIPMENT MARKET IN LATEST RANKINGS

Look at this figure genius:
Huawei and ZTE increased their revenue shares while Nokia and Cisco’s revenue shares declined for the full year 2019 telecom equipment market.
total-telecom-equipment-market-2019.png

https://www.delloro.com/the-telecom-equipment-market-2019/


Cisco is obviously the underdog ... consistent with report I gave you above:

Bolan also noted that Cisco, in fifth place, has struggled to get deals beyond North America.
https://www.fiercewireless.com/tech/ericsson-holds-slight-lead-over-huawei-mobile-core-market
:laugh:
Underdog?
Cisco has a market cap of $185b.
That’s more than all other you mentioned combined.
You are dense.
 
Underdog?
Cisco has a market cap of $185b.
That’s more than all other you mentioned combined.
You are dense.


Doesn't matter it is $185, $500 or $10000; Cisco is the tiniest in the global market share; tiny is tiny => underdog.

Can't you read the figure and the news? Its self explanatory and very clear isn't it?
The one with disability to grasp the figure and news should be the dense one. :)
 
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Doesn't matter it is $185, $500 or $10000; Cisco is the tiniest in the global market share; tiny is tiny => underdog.

Can't you read the figure and the news? Its self explanatory and very clear isn't it?
The one with disability to grasp the figure and news should be the dense one. :)
You are too dense.
There are more than just market share in mobile: enterprise network, campus network, access network, WLAN, SDN, Firewall, Proxy, Multiplexer, etc.
What are Huawei market shares in those sectors?
 
What matters is next year. not this year. Worst is all the purchased equipment will not be installed due to Countries backing out. So 90% of above purchase will either be returned or will go straight to garbage.
 
You are too dense.
There are more than just market share in mobile: enterprise network, campus network, access network, WLAN, SDN, Firewall, Proxy, Multiplexer, etc.
What are Huawei market shares in those sectors?


How much is the market share? Those are still telecom equipment right? LOL. you are too dense.
If what you claim is true then why Cisco underdog?

Can you read this figure? or can't? dont shy to admit if you can't :)

total-telecom-equipment-market-2019.png


Those you call: enterprise network, campus network, access network, WLAN, SDN, Firewall, Proxy, Multiplexer, etc obviously FAILED to help Cisco out of being tiny and underdog.
 
How much is the market share? Those are still telecom equipment right? LOL. you are too dense.
If what you claim is true then why Cisco underdog?

Can you read this figure? or can't? dont shy to admit if you can't :)

total-telecom-equipment-market-2019.png


Those you call: enterprise network, campus network, access network, WLAN, SDN, Firewall, Proxy, Multiplexer, etc obviously FAILED to help Cisco out of being tiny and underdog.
Again, you just look at a small segment of the market. If you look at the hardware market regardless of their usages the picture is more clearer. The most important technology on the market is Ethernet. Cisco is numero uno.

https://www.businesswire.com/news/h...ide-Ethernet-Switch-Router-Markets-Decline-Q1
Cisco finished 1Q20 with a 12.0% year-over-year decline in overall Ethernet switch revenues and market share of 51.9%. In the hotly contested 25Gb/100Gb segment, Cisco is the market leader with 39.8% of the market's revenue. Cisco's combined service provider and enterprise router revenue declined 28.1% year over year, with enterprise router revenue decreasing 18.7% and SP revenues falling 33.8%. Cisco's combined SP and enterprise router market share stands at 36.3%.

Huawei's Ethernet switch revenue declined 14.0% on an annualized basis, giving the company a market share of 8.4%. The company's combined SP and enterprise router revenue declined 2.1% year over year, resulting in a market share of 28.8%.

Arista Networks saw its Ethernet switch revenues decline 18.7% in 1Q20, bringing its share to 6.7% of the total market. 100Gb revenues account for 73.7% of the company's total revenue, reflecting the company's longstanding presence at hyperscalers and other cloud providers.
 
Remembering the barking by selfproclaimed industry experts from earlier last year, Huawei should be dead at this point. Now they are coping with selfdeluding spins about missing growth targets and industry wide first quarter declines due to the Corona crisis.:lol:
 
Again, you just look at a small segment of the market. If you look at the hardware market regardless of their usages the picture is more clearer. The most important technology on the market is Ethernet. Cisco is numero uno.

https://www.businesswire.com/news/h...ide-Ethernet-Switch-Router-Markets-Decline-Q1
Cisco finished 1Q20 with a 12.0% year-over-year decline in overall Ethernet switch revenues and market share of 51.9%. In the hotly contested 25Gb/100Gb segment, Cisco is the market leader with 39.8% of the market's revenue. Cisco's combined service provider and enterprise router revenue declined 28.1% year over year, with enterprise router revenue decreasing 18.7% and SP revenues falling 33.8%. Cisco's combined SP and enterprise router market share stands at 36.3%.

Huawei's Ethernet switch revenue declined 14.0% on an annualized basis, giving the company a market share of 8.4%. The company's combined SP and enterprise router revenue declined 2.1% year over year, resulting in a market share of 28.8%.

Arista Networks saw its Ethernet switch revenues decline 18.7% in 1Q20, bringing its share to 6.7% of the total market. 100Gb revenues account for 73.7% of the company's total revenue, reflecting the company's longstanding presence at hyperscalers and other cloud providers.


LOL Really stupid argument :laugh:

Router & ethernet is only small part of telecom equipment. Above, I have shown you many times how Cisco dwarfed in telecom equipment market, how come you densely say I with whole telecom market only see the "SMALL" segment while you bragging only Router/router see the whole segment? :omghaha:

It is you who just see the "SMALL" segment of telecom market not me. Cisco is indeed a market leader in router, but router is small segment in the telecom equipment market.

How many times I have to bring this graph due to your incapability to discern graph and statement? :lol:

total-telecom-equipment-market-2019.png


Read and stare on it slowly ... Router where Cisco leads is only 1 segment of the telecom equipment; and from the whole segment, CISCO is underdog! :laughcry:
 
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Yes, Huawei already stocking Chip reserve for the next 2 years.

In the same line with, Analyst predicted that China can produce 7nm chip in 2 years.

He stated the reason why Chinese firms can't produce high-end chips is not due to technological obstacles but more because lack of customers.
And high-end chips need huge investments.

Now they have Huawei as Big customers and many other chinese companies, because when SMIC can produce 7nm chips, with their 'unreliable entity list' rule China will tell all of their companies to use Domestic chips instead.

"The reason why domestic firms can't produce high-end chips is not due to technological obstacles but lack of customers," Xiang said, noting that the US' crackdown will definitely drive domestic giants like Huawei to shift to domestic suppliers. That in turn will boost demand for domestically made chips.

China able to mass produce 7-nm chips in two years, replace imports: analyst
By Ma Jingjing Source:Global Times Published: 2020/5/26 22:08:40
f846fa06-2c5e-447c-ac2e-3f41ceb17aad.jpeg

A view of the 32-layer 3D NAND flash chip developed by YMTC Photo: IC


Deputies to the National People's Congress (NPC) put forward suggestions to raise investment in the integrated circuit (IC) sector and speed up import substitution of chips, sparking confidence that Chinese companies will be able to mass produce 7-nanometer semiconductors in two years.

Delixi Group Chairman Hu Chengzhong, an NPC deputy, said in a proposal seen by the Global Times on Tuesday that China should focus on technological breakthroughs in the research and development of high-end ICs to raise the import substitution rate and break foreign chip manufacturers' domination.

Industry insiders said the US' persistent attack on Huawei is expected to motivate domestic companies to replace imported chips with domestic ones earlier than planned.

Xiang Ligang, director-general of telecoms industry association Information Consumption Alliance, told the Global Times he is confident that Chinese companies like Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp will be able to mass produce 7-nm and even 5-nm chips in about two years.

"The reason why domestic firms can't produce high-end chips is not due to technological obstacles but lack of customers," Xiang said, noting that the US' crackdown will definitely drive domestic giants like Huawei to shift to domestic suppliers. That in turn will boost demand for domestically made chips.

On May 15, the US Department of Commerce said it was amending an export rule and its Entity List to "strategically target Huawei's acquisition of semiconductors that are the direct product of certain US software and technology," read a statement on its website.

China is the world's largest chip user, but it has a low self-sufficiency rate and the supply of key manufacturing equipment and materials primarily relies on imports.

Hu said there is huge scope for domestically made chips to replace imported ones, as China imported $312 billion worth of ICs in 2018, while the market for domestic ones was only $37 billion.

"To jump start growth, the domestic semiconductor industry has to nurture enough talent and seek breakthroughs in innovative materials to overtake the US in the sector," an industry insider surnamed Ma told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Chen Mingbo, an official with the Shanghai government, proposed at the two sessions - the most important annual political event in the country - to establish an IC industry fund of 100 billion yuan ($14.01 billion) in Shanghai that would lead the development of high-end industries, the Shanghai Securities News reported on Tuesday.

"In the long term, China's growing strength in making high-end semiconductors will inflict devastating damage on US companies like Qualcomm, 70 percent of whose clients are Chinese firms now," Xiang said.

The Huawei Kirin 710A chip, based on 14-nm technology, has recently achieved commercial mass production.

https://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1189597.shtml


I read somewhere that SMIC still use US technology for the 7nm production, therefore if SMIC supply chips to Huawei without US approval will risk being bared from the procurement of the maintenance parts and future equipment from us vendor.
 
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