Smartphones uptake slow in China despite 3G and iPhone
By Owen Fletcher | Mar 16, 2010
China now has the iPhone and more big-name smartphones are due in  the country, but few buyers overall are choosing smartphones despite  promotion by China's mobile carriers.
High prices are slowing smartphone sales growth despite work to cut  their prices down to around 1,000 yuan (US$146). Smartphone sales in  China -- not counting sales on the country's gray market -- passed 7  million units in the final quarter of last year, but that accounted for  less than 15 percent of mobile phone sales in the country, Chinese  consultancy Analysys International said this week.
"Price is still the biggest obstacle," said Liu Ning, an analyst at  technology consultancy BDA. Smartphones remain expensive because they  require more powerful hardware and their makers often must pay to use  their operating systems, he said.
China's three big carriers -- China Unicom, China Mobile,  and China  Telecom -- have all sought more diverse handset lineups to  match expansion of their young 3G networks. China Unicom late last year  started selling the iPhone, China Mobile has a deal to get a BlackBerry  model with its homegrown 3G standard and China Telecom has said it is  in talks to offer the Palm Pre.
But the carriers have also worked to fill in their lower-end  handset offerings. China Mobile's chairman has said smartphone sales  would get a big boost if prices drop below 1,000 yuan.
Many smartphones, including the iPhone, can be had for that price  or less when bought with certain mobile service contracts. But the goal  is more to get unsubsidized prices down to 1,000 yuan, which the  carriers have yet to do for most smartphones, said Wang Liusheng, an  analyst at Analysys International. The more common price range now is  1,500 yuan to 3,000 yuan, he said.
To boost smartphone sales, the carriers also need to widen their  pool of applications and other content, such as music services or mobile  TV, Wang said. Each carrier is building its own app download store to  expand phone content and pull in more revenue, but the range of apps  available remains small.
High-end handsets have also faced a rough road. China Unicom sold  100,000 iPhones in roughly six weeks after the phone's launch, well  short of post-launch sales figures for carriers in other countries. Many  Chinese users have instead bought cheaper versions of the iPhone from  outside the country. Android smartphones are starting to appear, but  their prices can be high as well. The newly launched Motorola XT701  costs 4,299 yuan on a China Unicom Web site.
China Mobile has developed its own mobile OS based on Android,  partly to help lower the cost of its smartphones, said Liu of BDA.  Taiwanese chipset vendor MediaTek entering the smartphone market will  also help cut costs, Liu said.
MediaTek chipsets currently power many of the low-end mobile phones  sold in China. Microsoft and Google have teamed with MediaTek for phone  hardware packages that support the Windows Mobile 6 and Android OSes,  respectively.
Smartphone penetration is highest in China's major cities, where  residents have more buying power than their rural counterparts, said  Wang of Analysys. The gradual spread of 3G service is helping boost  smartphone use. But 3G remains relatively new and its coverage is best  in big cities, he said.
"In remote areas it definitely still has a long road to travel,"  Wang said.
IDG News Service (Beijing Bureau)
 
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