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Huawei revenue growth slows sharply in virus-afflicted Q1
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) April 21, 2020

Chinese telecom giant Huawei said Tuesday its revenue grew at a sharply slower rate of just 1.4 percent in the first quarter, when the coronavirus and efforts to contain it shut down China's economy.

The figures released by unlisted Huawei are among the first by a major Chinese corporation to provide a glimpse of the scale of the business impact from the pandemic, which emerged in China in December before spreading globally.

January-March revenue came in at 182.2 billion yuan ($25.8 billion), a year-on-year increase of 1.4 percent, compared with growth of 39 percent reported during the same period in 2019, the company said in a statement.

The first-quarter net profit margin came in at 7.3 percent, compared to around eight percent last year.

Huawei -- the world's top supplier of telecom networking equipment and number-two smartphone maker behind Samsung -- did not directly attribute the slower revenue growth to the coronavirus, which froze consumer spending and global supply chains.

But it said the firm and "its supplier network are working together to address the tough challenges facing production and resume operations".

Huawei added that business "is continuing as usual" but provided few specifics.

The numbers indicated that the pandemic was proving a tougher challenge, at least over the short-term, than a US campaign to isolate the company globally.

Huawei last month said its performance in full-year 2019 remained solid, with group revenue expanding 19.1 percent despite the US efforts.

Washington has lobbied allies to shun Huawei over suspicions its telecoms gear could contain security loopholes that allow China to spy on global communications traffic.

dma/dan

SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS


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INTERNET SPACE
New iPhone may be coming as locked-down consumers seek bargains
San Francisco (AFP) April 15, 2020
Is now the time to launch a new iPhone? Despite a pandemic-induced global economic crisis, Apple is widely believed to be set to release a reduced-priced handset that aims to fill a gap in its lineup, as early as this month. Google could also follow a similar path, after Samsung last week unveiled new devices costs less than $500. Reports suggest that the new Apple handset, to be called iPhone SE or iPhone 9, could have a starting price under $400, and generate some growth with the timetable ... read more

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