What's new

Samsung admits defeat in China’s vast smartphone market

beijingwalker

ELITE MEMBER
Nov 4, 2011
66,202
-55
99,776
Country
China
Location
China
Samsung admits defeat in China’s vast smartphone market
POSTED 9:31 AM, OCTOBER 4, 2019, BY CNN WIRES
Just a few years ago, one in every five smartphones sold in China was made by Samsung. How times have changed.

The smartphone maker said this week it was shutting down its last phone factory in the country in the southern city of Huizhou. Its share of the vast Chinese market has collapsed and labor costs have risen. The world’s largest smartphone maker is now setting its sights on more promising markets.

“As part of ongoing efforts to enhance efficiency in our production facility, Samsung Electronics has arrived at the difficult decision to cease operations of Samsung Electronics Huizhou,” it said in a statement on Thursday. The South Korean firm declined to share more details, including when exactly it was shuttering its operations and how many employees worked at the plant.

At its peak, the plant was Samsung’s biggest in China, producing a fifth of all smartphones sold in the country, according to the South China Morning Post.

Speculation had been mounting that the facility would close. Last month, the factory posted recruitment notices for 13 other companies on its official WeChat account, suggesting followers should look at other job postings.

On Thursday, local news website Zhiwei Tech posted a video on Chinese social media platform Weibo that appeared to show workers signing up to get a free Samsung phone. The phone was intended as a parting gift for employees who had been with the factory for more than 10 years, the outlet reported. Samsung declined to comment on the matter.

The move came after years of lackluster sales in China that were hampered by several factors. As of the first quarter of this year, Samsung accounted for just 1% of the Chinese smartphone market, according to Counterpoint Research.

The company’s share of the Chinese market had declined steadily since late 2016, when it suffered a sharp drop-off in demand because of the exploding Galaxy Note 7 crisis. Samsung’s delayed response to that situation led to a severe loss of consumer confidence, said Flora Tang, a research analyst at Counterpoint.

Prior to the crisis, Samsung was the one of the country’s top five smartphone vendors, and in 2013 accounted for around 20% of the Chinese market, she added.

The world’s biggest smartphone maker also lost out as local competition grew. Over the last few years, homegrown players such as Huawei, Oppo, Vivo and Xiaomi have become more popular, and they have “grabbed [market share] from Samsung with their strong product portfolio, affordable prices, more localized services ecosystem and extensive sales channels,” said Tang.

China’s smartphone market has also stalled in recent years, suffering its first ever annual decline in 2017 and its worst contraction in six years in the first quarter of 2019.

Now Samsung is expanding its manufacturing efforts in emerging markets, where it can benefit from lower costs such as cheaper labor. Around 60% of Samsung’s smartphones are now made in Vietnam, according to research firm Canalys.

Another big growth frontier for the Korean tech firm is India, the world’s second-biggest smartphone market. Samsung was the top seller there for years until it was leapfrogged by Xiaomi, sending both players into a tight race for the top spot.

Last year, Samsung opened what it called “the world’s largest mobile factory” in Noida, a city near New Delhi, which the company said would help it nearly double its annual capacity in the country.

Closing down the Chinese plant is a good option for the company to minimize its losses and shore up profitability, said Tang. “Its smartphone businesses in [Southeast Asia and] India appear more positive than that in China.”

https://fox2now.com/2019/10/04/samsung-admits-defeat-in-chinas-vast-smartphone-market/
 
every country should have companies who replicate tech, auto etc, the dependence on such stuff in this age of technology is surprising.

regards
 
Chinese consumers become very picky now, it's the beginning of the end for Samsung, losing biggest market share in China and India, they are no match for the Chinese competitors now.
 
Samsung still have hope actually.

They need to improve the quality of their low and mid range.
 
Chinese consumers become very picky now, it's the beginning of the end for Samsung, losing biggest market share in China and India, they are no match for the Chinese competitors now.
Hwei phone cant use Google now and Hwei staff's salary will be cut of every 3months when their cant meet the sale target.

if Xiaomi phone also cant use Goole, then CN's phone is dead in India market and make some more million Cnese staff become jobless :coffee:
 
Samsung still supplies a lot of components which go into the Chinese phones as well. By Xiaomi and the OPPO group with their various sub brands are doing really well.
 
Hwei phone cant use Google now and Hwei staff's salary will be cut of every 3months when their cant meet the sale target.

if Xiaomi phone also cant use Goole, then CN's phone is dead in India market and make some more million Cnese staff become jobless :coffee:
huawei phones can use google
 
Chinese consumers become very picky now, it's the beginning of the end for Samsung, losing biggest market share in China and India, they are no match for the Chinese competitors now.
Apple will be the next that packs and leaves.

China is no longer the manufacturing base for the world.
 
it's the beginning of the end for Samsung, losing biggest market share in China and India

They are still the top smartphone seller in the world and 2nd in the premium sector.

2018-08-01-image-2.jpg


Global-Premium-Market-2018Q4.jpg


On Thursday, local news website Zhiwei Tech posted a video on Chinese social media platform Weibo that appeared to show workers signing up to get a free Samsung phone. The phone was intended as a parting gift for employees who had been with the factory for more than 10 years, the outlet reported.

That's some great PR. I wonder if Apple or some other companies do the same.
 
Chinese consumers become very picky now, it's the beginning of the end for Samsung, losing biggest market share in China and India, they are no match for the Chinese competitors now.
They got a bad image for them selling inferior models for Chinese market. Chinese Galaxy and Note models had worse parts than those sold in the west.

The moment they realised that they can no longer get away with that trick, and they wanted to sell real high end smartphones, it was already too late. That image stuck to them.

Same happened to Toyota and Sony in China. Both started with marketing "special crap 2nd world models," and the moment they started to actually care for the market, their bad rep caught up to them.

Chinese made Toyotas were the worst piece of **** car around for decades, and the moment they tried to real sell Japanese pattern Toyota Crowns, they got a "surprise"
 
Samsung is not a good phone, I am not surprised. My first two phones were Samsungs, the first malfunctioned in 2 years, the second (brand new phone) in 6 months. I switched to Apple and no problems for 3 years now. I've seen people who've had Apple Iphones for 6+ years and its still in very good quality. If a phone can provide that level of quality then I doubt it will ever lose to its competitors. How is Apple doing in China if I may ask?
 
Apple is losing market share in China continually. The latest figure (Q2/2019) shows Apple only owns 6% market share in China.
https://www.counterpointresearch.com/zh-hans/china-smartphone-share/

I don't know if I trust this, sorry but I am a very suspicious person. Here in Canada whenever a new Iphone is being released, it is mainly the Chinese citizens who stand outside at night in front of Apple stores to buy it. I remember a rich Chinese student who came to Canada over 6 years ago to my high school and he paid a person $2000 to wait in line for him just so he can get the newest Iphone. Although I do have to say, that Huawei has been piquing my interest, the only problem is that I am afraid that it might fail on me the way Samsung did.
 
I don't know if I trust this, sorry but I am a very suspicious person. Here in Canada whenever a new Iphone is being released, it is mainly the Chinese citizens who stand outside at night in front of Apple stores to buy it. I remember a rich Chinese student who came to Canada over 6 years ago to my high school and he paid a person $2000 to wait in line for him just so he can get the newest Iphone. Although I do have to say, that Huawei has been piquing my interest, the only problem is that I am afraid that it might fail on me the way Samsung did.
I understand your concern. I can point you to more data resources from different vendors, but all show a shrinking market share of Apple in China.

Yes, Apple used to be popular among many young customers in China. Even today, there are still a large group of Apple fans in China (6% in share, but considering the massive scale of the China market, this is still a big number in absolute quantity). But the percentage of these people are shrinking at a lightening speed. Thanks for sharing you personal experience, I can also share you one, but on an opposite side:

I was in a dinner with 11 friends last week (during the National Holiday vacation). None of them, None, are using Iphone. We saw 9 Huawei, and 5 Xiaomi (some one has more than one Phones). What's important is, in just four or five years before, 80% of them were using Iphone (incl. me).
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Total: 1, Members: 0, Guests: 1)


Back
Top Bottom