China's
Huawei 2014 smartphone sales rise by a third
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[January 02, 2015]
By Gerry Shih
BEIJING (Reuters) - Huawei Technology Co
Ltd's [HWT.UL] smartphone sales rose by almost a third to $11.8 billion
in 2014, according to an internal memo seen by Reuters, showing the
Chinese telecoms firm's continued ascent in the global handset wars.
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The division shipped about 75 million smartphones in 2014, according
to the year-end memo to employees sent by Richard Yu, the head of
Huawei's consumer business. Although that represented a more than 40
percent year-on-year increase, the figure lagged behind Huawei's
previously stated sales target of 80 million units.
Huawei spokeswoman Maggie Qi said the company does not comment on
internal memos.
The results, which are due to be publicly announced in the coming
weeks, reaffirm Huawei's place among a small coterie of rising
smartphone makers, including Xiaomi Inc [XTC.UL] and LG Electronics,
whose growth rates are eclipsing those of industry leaders.
Pressured by low-cost vendors, top ranked Samsung Electronics Co is
likely to see its shipments nearly unchanged this year, while
second-ranked Apple Inc may have posted around 20 percent growth
after launching the iPhone 6, analysts estimate.
Those growth rates, however, pale in comparison to the expansion of
Xiaomi, which sold 26 million handsets during the first half of
2014.
If it reaches its sales target of 60 million for the year, Xiaomi
will have more than tripled its 2013 sales of 18.7 million. Private
investors believe it will continue to soar: the Beijing-based
company announced this week a new round of equity financing at $45
billion valuation, making Xiaomi the most highly valued private
technology company in the world.
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Meanwhile, close rival LG Electronics Inc may have seen its
smartphone shipments rise around 26 percent this year, according to
analysts.
Trendforce analyst Alan Chen said in a research note this month that
Huawei, Xiaomi and Lenovo Group Ltd, which recently purchased
Motorola from Google in a $2.91 billion deal, will battle to be the
top Chinese smartphone vendor in 2015.
"How Lenovo's Motorola acquisition plays out and whether Xiaomi can
replicate its home market success overseas will be key factors in
determining who becomes the top Chinese brand in 2015," Chen said.
(Reporting by Gerry Shih and Miyoung Kim; Editing by Miral Fahmy and
Louise Heavens)
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