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						How Apple is losing its grip on India
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		 [November 07, 2018] 
		 By Arnab Paul and Vibhuti Sharma 
 BENGALURU (Reuters) - Software engineer 
		Samee Alam was ready to take the big leap and buy an iPhone in this 
		week's Diwali festival sales, but at the last minute he opted for 
		cheaper Chinese competitor OnePlus instead.
 
 Alam, 27, spends hours on his phone watching shows, surfing and 
		shopping, making him the perfect target for Apple Inc as it strives to 
		raise sales among India's 1.3 billion consumers.
 
 But in a country where the average per capita income is around $2,000 a 
		year, even the cheapest of this year's new iPhones, the XR at 76,900 
		rupees ($1,058), costs twice as much as many of the alternatives.
 
 Hong Kong-based Counterpoint Research says that iPhone sales are falling 
		as a result. From three million phones in 2017, sales may sink to two 
		million this year, according to their estimate, the first decline in 
		four years.
 
 More than half of those sales will come from cheaper older models, and 
		the lack of progress in India was among problems cited by Chief 
		Executive Officer Tim Cook when he gave a disappointing holiday outlook 
		last week.
 
 Even in the premium segment, smartphones that cost more than $400, Apple 
		lagged Samsung and China's OnePlus in the third quarter.
 
		
		 
		
 "I have never used an iPhone and I was keen on getting my hands on one 
		but it didn't make sense," says Alam, who works for one of the raft of 
		firms to have invested in the southern city of Bengaluru, often called 
		India's Silicon Valley.
 
 "I look for storage, camera and processor in phones and cheaper 
		alternatives like OnePlus are more value for the money. The new iPhones 
		cost almost 100,000 rupees - I can get three good phones for that price 
		or even a decent gaming laptop."
 
 Solid Mac sales and the high unit price of iPhones meant Apple's total 
		revenue of $2 billion in India last year was still double that of 
		OnePlus, which only sells mobile phones. But Counterpoint's data says 
		that gap will also shrink.
 
 OnePlus' India head Vikas Agarwal told Reuters this week that 10-15 
		percent of new customers in recent months have been defectors from 
		Apple, suggesting even some loyalists are opting out of upgrading their 
		handsets.
 
 HIGH IMPORT DUTIES
 
 Apple's problems go beyond price.
 
 The company, facing down a handful of regulatory headaches, lost some of 
		its top executives in India at the start of this year.
 
 An Apple spokesman said the departures had nothing to do with the 
		company's performance, but people familiar with the matter told Reuters 
		that the departures were likely linked to the company changing its 
		distribution system. Apple has cut the number of distributors in the 
		country to two from five.
 
 The sources, who declined to be identified because they have business 
		relationships with Apple, also said company veteran Michel Columb is 
		still working on solidifying business relations since taking control of 
		the Indian operation in December.
 
 Apple declined to comment further.
 
 Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has sought to drive 
		electronics producers into manufacturing locally by steadily moving 
		tariffs up the supply chain from simple phone cases to sophisticated 
		chipsets and boards.
 
		
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			A salesperson speaks on the phone at an Apple reseller store in 
			Mumbai, India July 27, 2018. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas/File Photo 
              
            
			 
Along with local firms like Lava, global smartphone giants including Samsung 
Electronics Co Ltd, Oppo and Xiaomi Corp have responded aggressively, investing 
millions of dollars in plants around Bengaluru and Delhi tech hub Noida.
 Apple is the only major player which does not manufacture phones in the country 
and it only assembles two low-cost older models through Wistron Corp in 
Bengaluru.
 
 Industry experts say as a result the company still imports about 70-80 percent 
of its phones. That results in high import duties, which in turn make the phones 
expensive.
 
In the United States, the basic iPhone XR model costs $749 or roughly 54,400 
rupees, only two thirds of its retail price in India. Beyond that, while U.S. 
phones are subsidized under deals with wireless carriers, Apple's phones in 
India are not.
 "Apple doesn't have enough confidence ... in the Indian manufacturing system 
right now, to set up plants and move some of the manufacturing out of China," 
said analyst Navkendar Singh of tech consulting firm IDC.
 
 "In the process they are losing around 15-20 percent of their tax incentive ... 
which they could have passed on to the consumer."
 
 EMPTY STORES
 
 Diwali, the Festival of Lights, is peak selling time for electronics in India, 
but the Apple-licensed store in one of Bengaluru's big shopping malls was 
deserted this past Saturday.
 
"Features of the emerging phones are very similar to an iPhone," says salesman 
Aejaz Ahmed, adding volumes have fallen in the past few months. "It is very 
difficult to make out the difference from a distance because they even look so 
alike."
 Sales staff at several stores in Bengaluru and nearby Chennai pointed to the 
launch this year of the latest OnePlus phone as a major problem for the U.S. 
phonemaker. At 37,999 rupees, the Chinese company's 6T is half the price of the 
XR.
 
 
 The result, says Neil Shah, from Counterpoint, is that Apple's user base in 
India is set to decline about 10 percent to nine million users this year. That 
compares to an estimated 436 million Android users.
 
 "If your user base is declining, you are losing grip on the market," he says. 
"The new customer base is not coming."
 
 (Reporting by Vibhuti Sharma, Arnab Paul, Manas Mishra and Aaron Saldanha in 
Bengaluru; Writing by Patrick Graham and Nivedita Bhattacharjee; editing by 
Bernard Orr)
 
				 
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