In order to offset overseas decline, Huawei is aiming to grab up to half of China's smartphone market in 2019.
Huawei
Technologies Co Ltd is preparing for a 40 to 60 per cent decline
in international smartphone shipments, Bloomberg reported on
Sunday.The Chinese technology company is looking at options that
include pulling the latest model of its marquee overseas smartphone,
the Honor 20, according to the article, which cited people familiar
with the matter.
Marketing
and sales managers at the tech giant are internally expecting a drop
in volumes of anywhere between 40 million to 60 million smartphones
this year, the report said.The device will begin selling in parts of
Europe, including Britain and France, on June 21, the report said.
Executives will be monitoring the launch and may cut off shipments if
the sales are poor, it said.
In
order to offset overseas decline, Huawei is aiming to grab up to half
of China's
smartphone market in 2019, Bloomberg said. The company did not
respond to a Reuters request seeking comment.
The
US government put Huawei, the world's largest telecommunications
equipment company, on a trade blacklist in May that bars US suppliers
from doing business with it because of what Washington says are
national security concerns.
At
the time, Huawei founder and chief executive Ren Zhengfei said the
restrictions "may slow, but only slightly" the company's
growth.
A
similar US ban on China's ZTE Corp, almost crippled business for
Huawei's smaller rival early last year before the curb was lifted.
The
company's woes are feeding into trade tensions between Washington and
Beijing. President Donald Trump has said US complaints against Huawei
could be resolved within the framework of any trade deal.
The
ban has been eased slightly to allow a temporary general license that
lets Huawei purchase US goods.
However,
Broadcom sent a shockwave through the global chipmaking industry last
week when it forecast that the US-China trade tensions and the Huawei
ban would knock $2 billion off this year's sales.
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