China virus causes scare for India's smartphone makers
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[January 31, 2020] By
Sankalp Phartiyal
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - The coronavirus
outbreak in China could start to disrupt India's production of
smartphones if it continues to spread in February, as it could delay
component shipments, industry executives said.
India is the world's biggest smartphone maker after China but is still
largely dependent on China for supplies of parts such as cells, display
panels, camera modules and printed circuit boards.
Taiwan's Foxconn and Wistron make iPhones in India for Apple, and
Foxconn produces phones there for China's Xiaomi as well. Other
smartphone makers in India include South Korea's Samsung and China's
OnePlus.
So far smartphone makers in India have weathered the impact of the
virus, which has already killed 170 people, partly because they had
ramped up inventories of Chinese-made parts anyway to cover the Lunar
New Year holiday period when China's factories close down.
"Those disruptions were already planned but if it (the virus' spread)
gets prolonged then for March and April production we will have serious
trouble," said S.N. Rai, the co-founder of homegrown smartphone maker
Lava. "We're definitely worried about it."
Some components can be shipped in from markets such as South Korea,
Vietnam or Taiwan, but smartphone makers will only make such purchases
as a "last resort" as it would force companies to make changes including
in design and software, Rai said.
Samsung declined to comment, while Foxconn, Wistron, Apple and Xiaomi
did not respond to requests for comment.
China's OnePlus said its Indian operations could manage, in the short
term at least.
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Three models of China's Xiaomi Mi phones are pictured during their
launch in New Delhi, India, July 15, 2014. REUTERS/Anindito
Mukherjee/File Photo
"We are well covered because we have the entire production in India, we already
have enough stock, and even going forward many of the components will anyway be
coming directly from other markets," said Vikas Agarwal, the India head of
OnePlus.
While Beijing has expressed confidence in defeating the "devil" virus, which is
yet to be declared a global emergency by the World Health Organization, major
companies such as Alphabet Inc's Google and Sweden's IKEA have closed operations
in China.
India's Tata Motors, which counts China as a major market for its luxury Jaguar
Land Rover cars, said on Thursday it was worried about the coronavirus and
warned that the outbreak could hit profits.
As several airlines suspend flights to China, the movement of technical staff
from the country - such as on-site support executives, machine and automation
specialists - will also be curtailed and that will hit India's smartphone
sector, an executive at another foreign-owned smartphone maker, who did not wish
to be named, said.
For now, the industry just hopes the outbreak can be contained within the next
two weeks.
"If the problem persists beyond Feb. 10 then we have a real problem at hand,"
said Pankaj Mohindroo, head of the India Cellular & Electronics Association, an
industry lobby group.
(Reporting by Sankalp Phartiyal; Additional reporting by Heekyong Yang; Editing
by Euan Rocha and Susan Fenton)
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