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Rise of Chinese smartphones threatens Samsung, LG

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Rise of Chinese smartphones threatens Samsung, LG
Published : 2014-05-06 20:51
Updated : 2014-05-07 00:00

Chinese smartphone companies have been growing rapidly in recent years, becoming a threat to Korean handset makers such as Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics.

Chinese companies accounted for more than 20 percent of the global smartphone market last year, a sharp jump from 8 percent in 2010, according to global research firm Strategy Analytics.

“Chinese companies’ patterns of growth have been quite similar (to each other). They have made handsome profits in their domestic market, invested in gaining a technological edge, and are currently making forays into advanced markets,” said Kim Sung-ok, a senior researcher at the Korea Information Society Development Institute.

“As some Chinese smartphone companies begin to expand in the premium markets, competition with Korean companies will be inevitable down the road,” Kim added.

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Huawei Technologies smartphones are displayed at the company’s booth at the CEATEC Japan exhibition in Chiba, Japan, in October 2013. (Bloomberg)

Huawei and Lenovo, in particular, have shown outstanding performance in the Chinese market, as they made huge investments in research and development over the past three years.

Huawei, the world’s third-largest smartphone maker, following Samsung Electronics and Apple, is looking to boost sales of its premium handsets by spending over 10 percent of its revenue on R&D, and investing $300 million in global marketing this year.

“Around 50 percent of our smartphone sales now come from overseas markets, mostly in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. We plan to increase our presence in North America this year,” a Huawei spokesperson said recently at the company’s analyst summit.

Lenovo, which has so far focused on rolling out low-end handsets, is also seeking to introduce high-end mobile phones.

The company, which acquired Motorola’s Mobility unit in January, has around 5,000 patents for personal computers that can also be used for mobile technology development.

Its phones are sold in Indonesia, the Philippines, India and Russia, and the company plans to enter South America and the Middle East this year.

China, which used to be perceived as a market that produces inexpensive products, is gradually transforming itself into an attractive premium mobile market amid the slow growth in advanced countries and the rise of China’s purchasing power.

The average price of a smartphone in China was $189 in the fourth quarter of last year, which industry watchers said was too low to attract much attention from high-end manufacturers such as Samsung. But that could change soon, as this figure is expected to grow with the introduction of Long Term Evolution networks.

Although Samsung maintained the top spot with a 20 percent market share in the world’s second-largest economy last year, domestic companies such as Lenovo, Coolpad, Huawei, Xiaomi and ZTE still dominated their home turf overall, with a combined 46 percent share. LG Electronics accounted for less than 1 percent of the market.

China’s LTE smartphone shipments are expected to reach 360 million units by 2018, accounting for 80 percent of handsets in the market, according to Strategy Analytics.

By Shin Ji-hye (shinjh@heraldcorp.com)

Rise of Chinese smartphones threatens Samsung, LG
 
Yes, in fact, if you take price into consideration, Oppo, Huawei, OnePlus beats LG and Samsung dead in their act.
 
almost all of the component and spare parts in Samsung phone and Apple is made in China

so what is the differences, only the brand right?
 
It will be only a matter of time when the vast majority of HTC phones are made by contract manufacturers on the Mainland。It's a win-win for HTC and its outsourcing partners。

HTC confirms that it has been outsourcing smartphone production


May 7, 2014, 12:05 am TWN

TAIPEI -- HTC Corp. (宏達電) confirmed yesterday that some of its smartphones are being made by contract manufacturers, as was reported in the Wall Street Journal the day before.


The Taiwanese company said its outsourcing decision was based on gaining greater flexibility in its operational strategy rather than on cost reduction considerations.

“We have been outsourcing production. We think that once our assembly partners attain a manufacturing standard that meets our requirements, we can let them produce (our smartphones),” HTC Chief Financial Officer Chang Chia-lin (張嘉臨) said at a media briefing after an earnings report by the company via conference call.

“The outsourced products have been received well by consumers,” Chang said but declined to identify the products or name the assemblers.

He disclosed, however, that the phones in HTC's new Desire 8 series, promoted as “high cost-to-performance” products, are still being made at the company's factories.

Chang said HTC's outsourcing volume was not as high as 50 percent of its overall shipments, as reported in the Wall Street Journal, although he could not immediately give an estimate of the actual figure.

According to The Wall Street Journal report, Taiwan-based Compal Electronics Inc. and China's Wingtech Group have been assembling at least three of HTC's new Desire mid-tier phones, starting in spring this year.

Citing people familiar with the matter, the international daily said Wingtech has been manufacturing HTC's cheapest phone to date, the Desire 210, which was launched in India last month at 8,700 rupees (US$145). The Chinese company also produces the Desire 616 that is powered by an octa-core processor from MediaTek Inc., the report said.

Compal has been making some of HTC's other Desire phones, starting in the second quarter of the year, the paper reported.


HTC confirms that it has been outsourcing smartphone production - The China Post
 
I used Samsung , Huawei and IPhone 4. Though iPhone is still better, I found no difference between Samsung and Huawei. Though the price of Huawei Ascend Y300 was fairly less then the Samsung galaxy Ace 2.
 
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