Apple takes high road in China smartphone standoff with Xiaomi


  • TECH
  • Thursday, 29 Jan 2015

CHINA SUCCESS: Apple scores big in China, ringing up more smartphone sales than Samsung and Xiaomi.

SHANGHAI: Apple Inc is steering clear of Chinese rival Xiaomi Inc's low-price online strategy, ramping up store openings in China to harness its premium edge and fend off the fast-growing No 3 global smartphone maker.

The US firm's quarterly results smashed Wall Street expectations with record iPhone sales in the holiday season and a 70% rise in China, powering the company to the largest profit in corporate history.

Its result in China, as well as other emerging markets such as Brazil, marks a riposte to critics who questioned the firm's strategy a year ago not to launch a cheaper phone to lure cost-conscious buyers from Xiaomi and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd.

"In the long run Xiaomi is more of a threat to Apple than say Samsung," said Ben Thompson, analyst at Stratechery.com. "But the way Apple fights that is to further differentiate, not by trying to compete on Xiaomi's turf, which is low cost."

Instead, Apple plans to roll out around 20 new China stores by 2016, likely located in glitzy locations and rubbing shoulders with outlets for luxury brands such as Chanel and Hermes International SCA.

For Apple, brick-and-mortar stores help it maintain a premium image, from the product to in-store service and even packaging, allowing the firm to charge far higher prices than rivals - vital to its enviable profit margins.

"If you could only get an Apple product online, then there wouldn't be the same user experience and so people might not be so willing to buy. After all, it's an expensive product," said Shi Xinchao, 24, a civil servant in Jiangsu province.

What's next?

Apple's quarterly leap may be hard to replicate, with the launch of large-screen iPhones and a tie-up with telecoms operator China Mobile Ltd in late 2013 lifting last year's numbers.

"People had been waiting for large-screen iPhones for a long time. The demand had piled up and Apple hadn't been able to meet it," said Nicole Peng, research director for Canalys in China.

Canalys data showed Apple outsold all other smartphone makers in China by units shipped in October-December 2014, making it the country's top seller for the first time.

However, some were already asking what Apple's next driver of growth in China would be and how the firm would fend off Xiaomi's longer-term challenge.

Xiaomi unveiled the Mi Note earlier this month, its challenger to Apple's iPhone 6 Plus. At 2,299 yuan (RM1,348) for a model with 16 gigabytes of memory, the Mi Note costs almost two-thirds less than its Apple rival.

The Chinese firm, which sold its first phone just over three years ago, has also been moving into other personal and home devices that would be compatible with Xiaomi phones, helping it retain users.

"This could lock in Xiaomi's younger generation, low-income users from migrating to other brands like Apple," said Gartner analyst CK Lu.

"The large screen has given Apple a big core, but what's after the large screen? That's what we need to address." — Reuters

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Tech News

EU court adviser backs data privacy activist Schrems in Meta fight
Spotify says Apple has rejected its app update with price information for EU users
Amazon to invest $11 billion in Indiana to build data centers
IBM falls as enterprise-spending constraints choke consulting demand
Net neutrality rules to be restored in US agency vote
India's Tech Mahindra misses Q4 revenue view on weak communications segment
Explainer-Where are Wall Street's analyst notes on Trump's Truth Social?
AI spending worries cast gloom over Alphabet, Microsoft
Electric cars and digital connectivity dominate at Beijing auto show
Most global tech leaders see their companies unprepared for AI

Others Also Read