China's Huawei poised to overcome US ban with return of 5G phones
-research firms
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[July 12, 2023] By
David Kirton
SHENZHEN, China (Reuters) - China's Huawei Technologies is plotting a
return to the 5G smartphone industry by the end of this year, according
to research firms, signalling a comeback after a U.S. ban on equipment
sales decimated its consumer electronics business.
Huawei should be able to procure 5G chips domestically using its own
advances in semiconductor design tools along with chipmaking from
Semiconductor Manufacturing International Co (SMIC), three third-party
technology research firms covering China's smartphone sector told
Reuters.
The firms, citing industry sources including Huawei suppliers, spoke on
condition of anonymity because of confidentiality agreements with
clients.
Huawei declined to comment. SMIC did not respond to a request for
comment.
A return to the 5G phone market would mark a victory for the company
that for almost three years said it was in "survival" mode. Huawei's
consumer business revenue peaked at 483 billion yuan ($67 billion) in
2020, before plummeting by almost 50% a year later.
The Shenzhen-based tech giant once vied with Apple and Samsung to be the
world's biggest handset maker until rounds of U.S. restrictions
beginning in 2019 cut its access to chipmaking tools essential for
producing its most advanced models.
The U.S. and European governments have labelled Huawei a security risk,
a charge the company denies. Since then, Huawei has only sold limited
batches of 5G models using stockpiled chips.
Stuck selling last-generation 4G handsets, Huawei fell from most
rankings worldwide last year, when sales reached a low point, though it
rose to a 10% market share in China in the first quarter, according to
consultancy Canalys.
5G FORECASTS
One of the research firms said it expected Huawei to use SMIC's N+1
manufacturing process, though with a forecast yield rate of usable chips
below 50%, 5G shipments would be limited to around 2 million to 4
million units. A second firm estimated shipments could reach 10 million
units, without providing further details.
Huawei shipped 240.6 million smartphones worldwide in 2019, its peak
year, according to Canalys, before selling its Honor unit that accounted
for nearly a fifth of shipments that year.
The state-backed China Securities Journal newspaper this month reported
Huawei had raised its 2023 mobile shipment target to 40 million units
from 30 million at the start of the year, without referencing a return
to 5G phones.
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A Huawei logo and a 5G sign are pictured
at Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Shanghai, China June 28, 2019.
REUTERS/Aly Song
Huawei could produce 5G versions of flagship models like the iPhone
rival P60 this year, with new launches likely in early 2024, the
three research firms said, adding they were basing such predictions
on information they had received via checks with contacts in
Huawei's supply chain and recent company announcements.
However, U.S. restrictions cut Huawei off from Google's Android
operating system and the bundle of developer services upon which
most Android apps are based, limiting Huawei handsets' appeal
outside of China.
CHIP DESIGN TOOLS
The research firms noted Huawei in March announced it had made
breakthroughs in electronic design automation (EDA) tools for chips
produced at and above 14 nanometre (nm) technology.
Chip design companies use EDA software to produce the blueprints for
chips before they are mass manufactured at fabs.
The research firms, citing their own industry sources, believe
Huawei's EDA software could be used with SMIC's N+1 manufacturing
process to make chips at the equivalent of 7 nm, the powerful
semiconductors typically used in 5G phones.
Washington barred SMIC from obtaining an advanced chipmaking tool
called an EUV machine from Dutch firm ASML that is critical in the
process of making 7 nm chips.
But some analysts have found signs SMIC has nevertheless managed to
produce 7 nm chips by tweaking simpler DUV machines it could still
purchase freely from ASML.
The second research firm said it noticed Huawei had asked SMIC to
produce chip components below 14 nm this year for 5G products.
The forecast yield rate of less than 50% means that 5G chips are
"going to be costly", said Doug Fuller who researches chips at the
Copenhagen Business School.
"I guess if Huawei wants to eat the cost they can do this, but I
don't see such chips as price competitive," Fuller said.
($1 = 7.2023 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by David Kirton; Editing by Jamie Freed)
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