Huawei to pack less of a punch in the new year after bruising 2020,
analysts say
Send a link to a friend
[January 06, 2021] By
David Kirton
SHENZHEN, China (Reuters) - Huawei
Technologies Co Ltd this year will likely see slower 5G business and
push further into software, while hoping its smartphones get a reprieve
from U.S. sanctions which last year struck the chip-reliant heart of its
group, analysts said.
Limited access to high-end semiconductors means rationing during China's
network upgrade, they said, while the dissection of its mobile arm will
send Huawei tumbling down rankings while it continues to develop a
proprietary operating system.
China's leading telecommunications equipment maker found itself on a
U.S. trade blacklist in May 2019 due to national security concerns.
Huawei has repeatedly denied it is a risk.

That effectively banned U.S.-based firms from selling Huawei essential
U.S. technology. Last August, the ban was extended to foreign firms with
U.S. business, reaching chief suppliers such as Taiwan Semiconductor
Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC).
The change hit an Achilles heel as Huawei depends on TSMC to make
advanced chips for its handsets, fifth-generation (5G) network base
stations, servers, cloud computing and artificial intelligence products,
said Paul Triolo, head of global tech policy at Eurasia Group.
Stockpiles only last so long, he said.
"Passage of this death sentence does not involve a swift execution,"
technology analyst Dan Wang said in a client note. "Instead, the process
is much more like a slow strangulation."
Huawei declined to comment.
Wang said Huawei will feel the impact most acutely in its consumer
business, which brought in 54% of revenue in 2019.
In November, Huawei spun off budget smartphone line Honor in a sale
founder Ren Zhengfei said would allow the brand to regain access to
chips. Huawei could look to do the same with its premium lines this
year, Triolo said.
[to top of second column] |

Women wearing face masks following the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak walk past a Huawei store at a shopping complex
in Beijing, China, July 14, 2020. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang

Huawei was the world's biggest smartphone maker as recent as the second quarter
of 2020, but the Honor sale and chip shortage will likely take it out of the top
six this year, said data firm Trendforce.
Its luck may change with the U.S. presidential inauguration of Joe Biden, from
whom analysts expect more leniency towards Huawei's smartphone business. The
inauguration this month comes as Chief Financial Officer Meng Wangzhou discusses
a deal with U.S. prosecutors over allegations of doing business with Iran.
In the meantime, Huawei will likely focus on the Harmony operating system it is
developing for its smartphones after being cut off from Alphabet Inc's Android,
said Nicole Peng, VP of Mobility at consultancy Canalys.
Elsewhere in software, Huawei will likely pivot more towards services such as
cloud computing and internet-of-things devices, though these are unlikely to
offset slowdown in smartphones and telecommunication infrastructure, analysts
said.
Huawei's network business does have bright prospects, but with major markets
such as Britain and Japan banning its equipment, it will likely focus on China,
analysts said.
The company has enough chips to make around 500,000 5G base stations, said
Jefferies analyst Edison Lee. Yet rather than use up that supply, the government
will likely slow 5G introduction, taking "a middle-of-the-road approach to
balance between expanding coverage and waiting for Huawei to catch up," he said.
(Reporting by David Kirton; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |