Lenovo targets profitable
mobile division by year-end after third-quarter earnings
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[February 16, 2017]
By Sijia Jiang
HONG
KONG (Reuters) - The mobile division of China's Lenovo Group Ltd
<0992.HK> is "on track" to return to profit by December at the earliest
helped by strong growth in overseas markets, its chairman said on
Thursday after the firm posted a 67 percent drop in quarterly earnings.
Yang Yuanqing also dismissed the possibility of selling the struggling
division to focus on the personal computer (PC) market where Lenovo is
the world's biggest maker by shipments, as widely proposed by analysts
and company watchers.
"No, that is not my plan," Yang said in an interview. "Mobile should be
our core business as well."
The smartphone market has changed markedly since Lenovo spent $2.91
billion buying the money-losing Motorola handset business in 2014. Since
then, global shipment growth has slowed, while at home in China,
Lenovo's biggest market, late-comers such as Oppo and Huawei
Technologies Co Ltd [HWT.UL] have risen to prominence.
The mobile division now accounts for about 18 percent of Lenovo's
revenue, and in October-December, reported an operating loss of $112
million - roughly the same as in the previous quarter.
"I cannot say I am 100 percent satisfied (with the Motorola integration)
... but it is within my expectations," Yang said.
But he said he was confident of a recovery in the second half of the
fiscal year starting April, as handset shipments rose 7 percent in
October-December from three months prior. That rise came even though the
mobile division was hardest hit by an industry-wide shortage of
components such as memory chips.
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A man uses his laptop next to Lenovo's logos during the Mobile World
Congress in Barcelona, Spain February 25, 2016. REUTERS/Albert Gea
Moreover, Lenovo appointed former Samsung Electronics Co Ltd <005930.KS>
executive Jaden Jiang earlier this month as vice president, in charge of mobile
strategy in China.
Overall, component supply constraints plus a "challenging" macro-economic
environment in the third quarter pushed net profit down 67 percent on year to
$98 million, on revenue which fell 6 percent to $12.2 billion, Lenovo said.
The profit result compared with $159.53 million average of 14 analyst estimates
in a Thomson Reuters poll.
Lenovo's PC division, which accounts for about 70 percent of revenue, saw
revenue rise 2 percent after seven quarters of decline. Shipments rose 2
percent, helped by a 5 percent rise in shipments of PCs for businesses. That
helped its global PC market share hit a record high of 22.4 percent, Lenovo
said.
Yang said Lenovo would continue to consider mergers and acquisitions to further
its lead in the PC market, but declined to comment on talks it has held with
Japanese PC maker Fujitsu Ltd <6702.T>.
(Reporting by Sijia Jiang; Additional reporting by Umesh Desai; Editing by
Christopher Cushing)
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