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Two SIM Cards and Better Selfies: How China’s Smartphones Are Taking On Apple

WSJ Original article ›

Apple China management

03/04/2014

Grouped Articles

Apple Goes on Hiring Binge in Asia to Speed Product Releases

Wall Street Journal 03/04/2014

Apple's Global Roaming Plan

Wall Street Journal 03/05/2014

China Will Have to Wait for New iPhones

Wall Street Journal 09/11/2014

IPhone Sales in China Bolster Apple Earnings

New York Times 01/27/2015

Apple Earnings Boosted by iPhone Sales

Wall Street Journal 07/21/2015

Apple Stock Reacts After Tim Cook Email Praises China Sales

New York Times 08/24/2015

Apple China strategies

03/04/2014

Grouped Articles

Apple Goes on Hiring Binge in Asia to Speed Product Releases

Wall Street Journal 03/04/2014

Apple's Global Roaming Plan

Wall Street Journal 03/05/2014

Apple Reports $7.7 Billion Profit on Strong iPhone Sales

New York Times 07/22/2014

Winding Up Apple for Its Next Act

Wall Street Journal 07/23/2014

Apple Can Bear Even More Fruit

Wall Street Journal 09/08/2014

China Will Have to Wait for New iPhones

Wall Street Journal 09/11/2014

China shuts down Apple services iTunes Music and iBooks store to promote local companies and local content

04/21/2016

In an effort to implement president Xi Jinping's policy of reducing the influence of western companies such as IBM, Cisco, Microsoft, Qualcomm in China's core industries, more restrictive policies and efforts to get the companies to share technology were introduced in 2015. Apple was relatively an exception. In April 2016 China's ministry responsible for internet and culture shut down Apple services for books and music. Apart from favoring local companies Huawei, Alibaba, Tencent, this reduces foreign culture's influence in China, a policy favored by the government to maintain what it sees as "positive influence," by local providers.

Grouped Articles

Apple Services Shut Down in China in Startling About-Face

New York Times 04/21/2016

China Sales Slide Eats Into Apple Revenue

Wall Street Journal 04/28/2016

Microsoft Shuts Chinese Web Portal as It Shifts Focus There

Wall Street Journal 05/13/2016

Beijing: Apple iPhone Violated Chinese Patent

WSJ 06/17/2016

Tim Cook Pledges More Apple Investment in China

WSJ 08/16/2016

Two SIM Cards and Better Selfies: How China’s Smartphones Are Taking On Apple

WSJ 06/07/2017

Competition from local brands in China (Xiaomi, Lenovo, HTC) to the Apple iPhone and Samsung smartphones 2014-2016

09/28/2014

Grouped Articles

A Glum Sign for Apple in China, as Smuggled iPhones Go Begging

New York Times 09/28/2014

Samsung Electronics Third-Quarter Profit Plunges

Wall Street Journal 10/07/2014

Xiaomi Makes a Profit on Its Cheap Smartphones

Wall Street Journal 11/06/2014

Samsung Considering Shake-Up in Management

Wall Street Journal 11/24/2014

The Rise of a New Smartphone Giant: China’s Xiaomi

New York Times 12/14/2014

Adidos and Hotwind? In China, Brands Evoke Foreign Names, Even if They’re Gibberish

New York Times 12/26/2014

Apple's first product launch for the iPhone in Beijing, China

07/08/2010

Apple's iPhone 5 is targeted at a lower price segment of the market. It will cost $99 in the U.S. In China where Apple has about 5% market share compared to 18% for Samsung, Apple still focusses on the high end of the market because the iPhone 5C will cost about 4500 yuan or about $733. Customers in smaller cities in China are looking for phones in the 1000 to 2000 yuan range. China's Lenovo, HTC and Huawei are increasing market share with lower priced smartphones. In China subsidies for the phone kick in later with lower phone bills unlike what happens in the U.S., where the phone costs less when purchased.

Grouped Articles

Digits | WSJ.com/digits

Wall Street Journal 09/11/2013

Apple's Gilded Approach to Value

Wall Street Journal 09/10/2013

Apple's 'Low End' Strategy Disappoints

Wall Street Journal 09/11/2013

Apple Won't Go for Broke in China

Wall Street Journal 09/12/2013

Turmoil Roils HTC as Phone Sales Shrivel

Wall Street Journal 11/06/2013

Even With a Big Store in China, Apple Remains an Underdog There

New York Times 07/08/2010

Xiaomi's model of selling online comparable models to the iPhone near cost

06/08/2015

Xiaomi has in the four years since its start in 2011 gained 13.7% market share in China, only 1 percentage point below Apple and passing Samsung at 9.7% (for 1st quarter 2015, source: IDC). It does not incur marketing costs by selling online and generating user interest through its fan clubs. Contract manufacturers provide phones of high quality, often using the same parts used in iPhones. Xiaomi focusses on design and software. A 64 gigabyte Mi Note Pro from Xiaomi costs 2999 yuan or $489 in China, compared to Apple 64 gigabyte Apple iPhone 6 at over twice the price at 6088 yuan, and the Samsung Galay S6 at 5288 yuan 76% above the Mi Note Pro. By offering similar quality features at these prices Xiaomi has particularly hurt Samsung sales in China.

Grouped Articles

Xiaomi, China’s New Phone Giant, Takes Aim at World

Wall Street Journal 06/08/2015

Samsung Profits Hurt by Smartphone Price Declines

Wall Street Journal 07/30/2015

Hugo Barra Outlines Xiaomi’s Ambitious Plans

Wall Street Journal 08/05/2015

Apple Stock Reacts After Tim Cook Email Praises China Sales

New York Times 08/24/2015

In China’s Smartphone Battle, Huawei Catches Up to Xiaomi

Wall Street Journal 10/23/2015

Apple iPhone Sales Grow at Slowest Rate Ever

Wall Street Journal 01/27/2016

China Telecom and the Apple iPhone

07/08/2010

Grouped Articles

Apple Faces Dilemma Over Strategy in China

Wall Street Journal 04/24/2013

Apple's Smartphone Market Share Falls

Wall Street Journal 04/28/2013

Apple Won't Go for Broke in China

Wall Street Journal 09/12/2013

Even With a Big Store in China, Apple Remains an Underdog There

New York Times 07/08/2010

Daily Report- Apple's China Mobile Deal Gets Off to a Weak Start

New York Times 01/17/2014

Apple Reports $7.7 Billion Profit on Strong iPhone Sales

New York Times 07/22/2014


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