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Research report points to China's smartphone production Falling under 70% as some smartphone production moves out of China - Patently Apple

A new analytical report today from Counterpoint states that China is losing luster as the world’s smartphone factory. This is highlighted by recent dynamics within the supply chain and production ecosystem, which has been steadily shifting abroad as rising costs, trade tensions with the US, and a re-prioritization of other consumer markets make China less attractive as a production base. This has pressured vendors to consider other options, and India and Vietnam have come to the fore.

India in particular has gained, with its ‘Make in India’ policy enticing many vendors to expand there. And with the country now the world’s second largest smartphone market, manufacturers will be more easily swayed into moving production onto the sub-continent.

A good example of this shift is Samsung Electronics. The company shuttered all China smartphone production at end-2019 when it closed its Huizhou location – a plant which in 2017 produced 63m handsets.

Rising labor costs and shrinking domestic market share were the key reasons for closure. Average monthly salaries at the plant tripled, from US$274 to US$832 in 2008 and 2018, while Samsung’s domestic market share fell below 1% in 2019 after peaking at 19.7% in 2013.

Samsung plans to replace its in-house Chinese production line by expanding existing facilities in Vietnam and India. Although some production remains in China, this will only be through Chinese ODMs.

2 x counterpoint chart mar 23 2020

(Click on image to slightly Enlarge) 

OPPO continues to expand India production, growing from 15m units in 2018 to 50m in 2019. The company plans to further increase the number to 100m in 2020, attracted by the government’s ‘Make in India’ tariff benefits. This would mean well over half OPPO’s devices will be ‘Made in India’, making the country a strategic location from which to expand into SE Asia and Africa.

Xiaomi, which has maintained the top spot since 2018 in India smartphone shipments, announced last year the construction of its seventh Indian factory, which would increase current production numbers by 50%. The company’s India facilities produced 40m units last year, 95% of which were Made in India; for 2020, the numbers are expected to reach 60m and 99%.

Apple, which does not own production facilities but outsources production through EMS firms such as Foxconn and Pegatron, is also diversifying outside of China. Starting with the iPhone SE in 2017, the 6S in 2018, and the X last year, Apple moved some production to India to take advantage of tariff benefits under the ‘Make in India’ policy, and to better target the underpenetrated Indian market.

It now plans to move up to 30% of current production outside China in response to protracted trade conflicts between China and the US; India, Vietnam and other SE Asian countries have been brought up as possible alternatives."

While Counterpoint appears to be relying on 2019 rumors of Apple moving up to 30% of their production out of China -- Apple's CEO recently expressed confidence in the supply chain in China that they've created by emphasizing the quality of production and the depth of engineering it has versus moving outside of China to simply save on costs alone.

With the COVID-19 storm gathering strength around the globe, the topic of creating new supply chains in the US has once again become an urgent concern with the U.S. government.

More specifically, the government has expressed concern that the vast majority of needed pharmaceuticals in the U.S. are dangerously in the hands of China. In fact members of the Communist Party recently lashed out at the United States with irresponsible heated rhetoric stating that they could stop production of pharmaceuticals that would kill Americans (01, 02 & 03).

China's secrecy regarding the COVID-19 outbreak in Wuhan has endangered the health of the the world while deeply damaging the world economy. Under these circumstances, some tech companies must be rethinking their supply chains in China at this moment.

At the end of the day we'll have to watch for the annual 2020 analytical report from Counterpoint to see if the trend of smartphone production leaving China was simply a blip due to Samsung's Huizhou plant closure alone or whether it's an actual trend, especially in light of COVID-19.

As for Apple, having their CEO named the new Chairman of the Advisory Board of the School of Economics in Beijing in  late 2019 and Cook's recent commentary on their belief in their Chinese supply chain, it appears that Apple isn't ready to pull out of China anytime soon.

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Research report points to China's smartphone production Falling under 70% as some smartphone production moves out of China - Patently Apple
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