Apple teams with Ant Financial, banks for interest-free
iPhone financing in China
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[February 22, 2019]
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Apple Inc has teamed
up with Chinese payments giant Ant Financial Services Group and several
local banks to offer interest-free financing, its first such move in the
country as it looks to boost waning smartphone sales.
The U.S. tech behemoth issued a rare revenue warning last month citing
weaker iPhone sales in China, one of its most important markets, where
consumer spending has taken a hit due to a slowdown in economic growth.
On its China website, Apple is promoting the new scheme, under which
customers can pay 271 yuan ($40.31) each month to purchase an iPhone XR,
and 362 yuan each month for an iPhone XS. Customers trading in old
models can get cheaper installments.
Users buying products worth a minimum of 4,000 yuan worth from Apple
would qualify for interest-free financing that can be paid over three,
six, nine, 12 or 24 months, the website shows.
The 64GB versions of iPhone's XR and XS models sell at official sticker
prices of 6,499 yuan and 8,699, respectively.
Apple is offering the plan through Huabei, a consumer credit service run
by Ant Financial, the payment affiliate of e-commerce giant Alibaba,
Apple's China website shows.
Apple and Ant Financial declined to comment on the scheme.
China Construction Bank Corp, China Merchants Bank Co Ltd, Agricultural
Bank of China Ltd and Industrial and Commercial bank of China Ltd also
offer financing schemes for Apple products, with minimum purchases of
300 yuan, Apple's China website shows.
Apple is facing headwinds in China where economic growth slowed in 2018
to the weakest pace in 28 years, exacerbated by a crippling trade war
with the United States. The U.S. company is also battling mounting
competition from Chinese handset makers.
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A new iPhone X is sold at an Apple Store in Beijing, China November
3, 2017. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj/File Photo
Several Chinese electronics retailers including Alibaba-backed Suning and JD.com
slashed iPhone prices recently, with discounts as steep as 20 percent.
Data from research firm IDC shows iPhone shipments to China fell 19.9 percent
during the fourth quarter of 2018 versus a year earlier. Total smartphone
shipments to the country were down 9.7 percent over the same period, although
domestic brands such as Huawei, Oppo, and Vivo still grew market share.
Apple's revenue for its Greater China region fell 27 percent year-on-year to $13
billion in the quarter ended December. CEO Tim Cook blamed macroeconomic
conditions and currency fluctuations for Apple's overall flagging growth.
The company has been sharpening its focus on its services business, including
the App Store, mobile payments and music streaming, after the recent dip in
iPhone sales that generates most of its profit.
It has teamed up with Goldman Sachs to issue credit cards that will be paired
with iPhones and will help users manage their money, the Wall Street Journal
reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter.
(Reporting by Josh Horwitz; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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