China's
Xiaomi to invest in Indian start-ups, overseas content
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[January 16, 2015]
By Paul Carsten
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's Xiaomi Inc
plans to invest in Indian tech start-ups and overseas media content, as
the world's No.3 smartphone maker looks to dominate homes with its own
TVs and appliances.
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Just three years after selling its first handset, a $1.1 billion
round of fund-raising announced in December valued the privately
held company at $45 billion, making it the world's most valuable
tech start-up.
With Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Apple Inc in its sights in the
handset market, Xiaomi is now expanding into home appliances and
television. The Beijing-based company has already reserved $1
billion for Internet TV content.
"Where we really want to make significant investments is in content,
particularly in the Chinese market to start with but beyond that in
other markets as well," Hugo Barra, vice president of Xiaomi's
global division, said in an interview on Friday.
Taking a leaf from Samsung's book, Xiaomi's recent investments
include a Chinese electronics maker as part of a strategy to build
an Internet-of-things environment, where devices can be controlled
by smartphones.
"One area that we are also looking to make some investments in is
start-ups in India. India is already the largest market for us
outside of mainland China," Barra said, without elaborating on the
types of start-ups.
Xiaomi has had mixed success in India. Sales of its handsets were
suspended there after telecoms equipment maker Ericsson filed a
complaint alleging infringement of intellectual property rights.
Partial sales were permitted from December though the case is yet to
be settled.
Barra dismissed concern that overseas expansion could be stalled by
allegations of IP violation, and said Ericsson's lawsuit doesn't
affect day-to-day operations.
"We have licensed a lot of intellectual property already," he said.
Xiaomi licenses others' intellectual property, but some claims made
against the company are illegitimate and Xiaomi will fight those,
Barra said.
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Critics say Xiaomi is unwilling to expand into Western markets
because it still has too few patents to compete.
"It doesn't have anything to do with intellectual property," said
Barra. "It has to do with the fact that we have much more
significant opportunities in developing markets, where our model of
selling very high specification devices at really aggressive prices
is much more powerful."
"These are larger populations when you add them together than the
Western world."
On Monday, Reuters exclusively reported that Chief Executive Lei Jun
and Facebook Inc counterpart Mark Zuckerberg discussed a potential
investment by Facebook in China's top smartphone maker ahead of last
month's fundraising, but a deal never materialised.
Barra declined to comment on Xiaomi's cooperation with Facebook,
beyond saying they had a very good relationship.
(Reporting by Paul Carsten; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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