China discounts, cheaper iPhone to cushion Apple from
virus blow to demand
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[April 28, 2020]
By Josh Horwitz
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Apple Inc's <AAPL.O> discounts on the iPhone 11 in
China and the release of a new low-price SE model have put the company
in a better position than rivals to weather a coronavirus-related plunge
in global smartphone demand.
While China, which accounts for roughly 15% of Apple's revenue, appears
to be a rare bright spot, investors will be keen to get a picture of
global demand when the Cupertino, California-headquartered company
reports second-quarter results on Thursday.
The iPhone maker has shut retail stores in the United States and Europe
following the COVID-19 outbreak, and China is the only major market
where it has been able to reopen all shops.
Consumer spending is expected to be muted as the pandemic has crippled
economies and Apple, the world's second-most valuable tech company, is
better armed with the launch of its new price-conscious iPhone model,
analysts said.
"Apple is better positioned than most to experience a rapid recovery in
a post COVID world," Evercore analyst Amit Daryanani said in a research
note. "We see demand as pushed out, not canceled."
He added that the launch of the $399 iPhone SE suggested that Apple's
supply chain was getting back on its feet after weeks of shutdown
earlier this year.
Analysts expect Apple to report a 6% drop in revenue and an 11% fall in
net income in its fiscal second quarter, according to Refinitiv data.
On the other hand, Chinese brands such as Oppo and Vivo who have
steadily moved to offer high-end models to challenge iPhones, stand to
lose marketshare as bargain hunters choose Apple.
Earlier this month, several online retailers in China slashed prices of
the iPhone 11 by as much as 18% - a tactic Apple has used in the past to
boost demand. And while initial social media reaction to the new iPhone
SE was muted, analysts said they were seeing a pick up in demand.
The cheaper iPhone SE could tempt iPhone owners to opt for a newer
device, something they might have otherwise delayed in a weak economy,
said Nicole Peng, who tracks the smartphone sector at research firm
Canalys.
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The Apple Inc. logo is seen hanging at the entrance to the Apple
store on 5th Avenue in Manhattan, New York, U.S., October 16, 2019.
REUTERS/Mike Segar
"People want to avoid uncertainty in a downturn," she said. "Having a brand like
Apple that can showcase quality and make people less worried about breakdowns or
after-sales service can bring in buyers."
CHEAP IS GOOD
Early data suggests that the Chinese smartphone market is recovering rapidly in
the aftermath of the virus, and Apple has emerged relatively unscathed.
Sales of iPhones in China jumped 21% last month from a year earlier and more
than three fold from February, government data showed, meaning March-quarter
sales in the country were likely to have slipped just 1%.
To be sure, a recovery in Chinese demand won't offset sales lost in the United
States and Europe. And the company is yet to launch a smartphone enabled with 5G
wireless technology like those offered by Asian rivals, a disadvantage for Apple
so far.
But those same expensive 5G models may not sell well in the current climate of
frugality, analysts said.
"If there are no massive subsidies (in China), I doubt there will be many
smartphone users who will be eager to upgrade to 5G," said Linda Sui, who tracks
the smartphone sector at research firm Strategy Analytics.
Sui expects iPhone shipments in 2020 to be down 2 percentage points at the most,
versus double digit declines at Chinese firms.
Apple also has revenue from its services business to fall back on. It has
leveraged its large iPhone customer base to boost services revenue from music,
apps, gaming and video.
"Apple's Services segment should remain resilient in today's work-from-home
environment, thereby demonstrating the durability of Apple's model," Cowen
analyst Krish Sankar said.
(Reporting by Josh Horwitz in Shanghai; Additional reporting by Stephen Nellis
in San Francisco and Geetha Panchaksharam in Bengaluru; Editng by Sayantani
Ghosh and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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