Underlining how much the launch means for Apple, Chief Executive
Tim Cook was on hand as the carrier's flagship store opened in
Beijing's financial district. With China Mobile Chairman Xi Guohua
alongside, Cook gifted signed iPhones to a handful of customers and
posed for pictures.
The long-awaited deal could trigger a limited turnaround for Apple,
whose fortunes have wavered in China in the face of stiff
competition from market-leader Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and
up-and-coming local rival Xiaomi Tech.
Samsung had a 21 percent share of China's smartphone market in the
third quarter of 2013, with Apple trailing in fifth place with just
6 percent, according to research firm Canalys.
But the arrival of the iPhone could be a double-edged sword for
China Mobile, with some analysts predicting a costly subsidy war as
rival carriers compete to lure customers.
"I don't see a price war coming where Apple is engaged in the war,
but I do think you're going to see a subsidy war coming," said
Michael Clendenin, managing director of Shanghai-based RedTech
Advisors.
"China Mobile, if they're not making their targets on sales for
these phones, they're going to increase the subsidies... It's like
airlines: the other guys will fall like dominoes, so China Unicom
will do it and China Telecom will do it."
China Mobile's iPhone sales are expected to reach 12 million in its
2014 fiscal year, but its subsidies will leap 57 percent to 42.4
billion yuan ($7 billion), up from 27 billion yuan in its fiscal
year 2013, wrote Cynthia Meng, a Jefferies analyst, in a December
note.
For the basic 16GB iPhone 5S, with no subscriber contract, China
Mobile is charging 5,288 yuan ($870), the same as on Apple's China
website. The carrier is charging 4,488 yuan ($740) for a basic
iPhone 5C, again the same price as on Apple's China site.
China Unicom Hong Kong Ltd and China Telecom Corp Ltd slashed their
iPhone prices by as much as 1,288 yuan ($210) following the
announcement that a deal had been struck between Apple and China
Mobile. The pair have also offered a range of cut-price deals on
contracts.
These offerings and the launch of the iPhone on China Mobile come in
the weeks running up to Chinese New Year, when people traditionally
exchange gifts of money in red envelopes and retail sales jump.
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SALES CANNIBALIZATION
After taking years to hammer out a deal with China Mobile, Apple's
sales in China should get a short, sharp boost as subscribers make
the most of the double-whammy of the iPhone's arrival and the
rollout of high-speed 4G mobile networks.
Reservations for iPhones had already hit 1.3 million on Wednesday,
according to a China Mobile spokeswoman, although Reuters checks
showed that there were multiple registrations using fake ID numbers.
But the rewards are expected to be short-lived for the Cupertino,
California-based company, which faces a deeper problem in China of
having fallen out of favor with consumers who are increasingly
opting for domestic offerings.
Another issue is the thriving grey market for iPhones, where users
can buy handsets typically smuggled from Hong Kong and then sign up
for a China Mobile contract. China Mobile already has 45 million
iPhone users in China, according to a company spokeswoman.
"You need to consider the cannibalization for sales to China Unicom,
China Telecom and the grey market, so even though there's an
addition from China Mobile it will also impact sales from other
channels as well," said CK Lu, a Taiwan-based analyst with Gartner.
"If we really want to see the expansion of sales we'll have to wait
for the next version of the iPhone. If China Mobile gets first
launch and their subsidies are attractive people will probably rush
to the iPhone that China Mobile can provide."
($1 = 6.0557 Chinese yuan)
(Additional reporting by Adam Rose; editing by Alex Richardson and
Kenneth Maxwell)
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