Technology, Discovery & Innovation
NewsFactor Network Sites:   NewsFactor.com Security CRM Business Sci-Tech Newsletters XML/RSS Feed  
   
Home Computing Digital Life Discovery Space More Topics...
Business Briefing
Average Rating:
Rate this article:  
Costs May Outweigh iPhone Sales for China Unicom Costs May Outweigh iPhone Sales for China Unicom
By Patricia Resende
November 3, 2009 1:56PM

Bookmark and Share
China Unicom's costs may outweigh any gains from sales of Apple, Inc.'s iPhone 3GS. After four days, China Unicom reported 5,000 iPhone 3GS subscribers, far less than AT&T's iPhone 3GS launch in the U.S. Analysts are lowering estimates for China Unicom's iPhone 3GS sales, with Gene Munster slashing his expectations for next year to 555,000.
 



China Unicom's agreement to offer the Apple iPhone 3GS may take a bite out of the Beijing company's bottom line. The wireless carrier's costs for marketing and subsidies may outweigh sales of iPhones and subscriptions.

Since solidifying its three-year, non-exclusive deal with Apple to sell the iPhone 3GS, China's number-two wireless carrier said Tuesday that it has secured one million new 3G network Relevant Products/Services subscribers since the launch and foresees adding an additional one million subscribers each month. The company claims to have 5,000 subscribers already signed up for the iPhone 3GS in just four days since its launch.

Analysts, however, said the cost associated with rolling out the 3G (WCDMA) network, advertising and marketing the iPhone may take a toll on China Unicom's bottom line.

China Unicom, number two behind China Telecom, began focusing on its 3G network construction in January when it received its 3G operating license. The company has been able to reduce some costs due to bulk purchases, but expanded coverage from the original 284 cities planned earlier in the year to 335 has increased the rollout cost.

Unicom Not Alone

The company, however, isn't alone. China Unicom and its top rivals China Telecom and China Mobile have all had to deal with costs associated with the new 3G network, and all reported lackluster quarterly earnings last month.

The financial woes will not change for some time because of marketing expenses and network construction costs, Tong Jilu, vice president and chief financial officer at Unicom, told Reuters.

After reaching its multi-year agreement with Apple to sell the iPhone, China Unicom said it will implement several measures to steadily grow its mobile business while cushioning the decline of its landline business.

Scaling Down Expectations

With 5,000 iPhone subscribers signed up, China Unicom is confident that the launch of the iPhone 3GS, which will retail for $1,025, will boost its mobile sales in the fourth quarter. While 5,000 may be a lot for China Unicom, it pales in comparison to AT&T Relevant Products/Services's launch in the U.S., which resulted in 146,000 iPhones sold.

While some analysts predict sales of the iPhone in China to be about 500,000, others say it won't matter because the cost of marketing the device as well as subsidies paid will shrink any profits from smartphone sales.

Already analysts are saying the launch of Apple's iPhone in China is a disappointment. Piper Jaffray's Gene Munster, an analyst known for cheering on Apple, initially said he expected China to contribute one million to two million iPhone sales to the worldwide total for next year. Unicom's launch, however, has Munster revising China's contribution of unit sales to 555,000 next year.

"We believe that eventually China will emerge as a major market for iPhone sales," wrote Jaffray in a research note on Tuesday, "but it could take a year or two to gain meaningful unit traction as it did in the U.S."
 

Tell Us What You Think
Your Comment:



Advertisement


 Business Briefing
1.   Super Bowl Ads Go for Laughs, Heart
2.   Veteran SAP CEO Abruptly Resigns
3.   A Telecom Italia-Telefonica Merger?
4.   U.S. Investigating Prius Brake Issues
5.   Ex-Yahoo Exec Lands at Chegg.com


advertisement
EPIC Objects To Google-NSA TiesEPIC Objects To Google-NSA Ties
Cyberattack meant to rattle Google?
Average Rating:
Torrent Traps Used To Harvest LoginsTorrent Traps Used To Harvest Logins
Web sites sold with backdoor access.
Average Rating:
Stealth Cookies Track ConsumersStealth Cookies Track Consumers
May be used to offer 'dynamic' pricing.
Average Rating:

Enterprise Hardware Spotlight
Nvidia Auto-Switches Notebook GPU To Save Battery Life
Nvidia has taken the wraps off a notebook technology that chooses the best graphics processor for any given application and automatically routes the workload to Nvidia or Intel processors.
 
Microsoft Says Battery Woes Not Caused By Windows 7
Battery problems on Windows 7 machines are not caused by the operating system. That's the position of Stephen Sinofsky, head of the Windows division, in a long posting on the Windows engineering blog.
 
IBM's New POWER7 Servers Save Energy with Big Loads
IBM has unveiled high-capacity servers that are the first to be based on its new, multi-core POWER7 chip. It said the new line is designed "to manage the most demanding emerging applications."
 

Mobile Enterprise Spotlight
To Love or Not To Love: Apple iPad Pros and Cons
Now that the iPad has officially been announced, opinions are rolling in on this device that combines the features of an iPod, e-reader, and tablet PC. Will the iPad turn fewer heads than the iPhone?
 
Analysts See iPad Price Drop, with Some Cannibalization
Just weeks before Apple officially rolls out the iPad, financial analysts are making pricing predictions. But could the analysis itself hinder the initial demand for the pricey tablet computer?
 
Bar Codes Go Mobile, Get Hip Again
For decades, retailers have used patterns of black dots and lines to encode data onto products. Now, bar codes are gaining favor as an easy way for cell-phone users to view ads and other data instantly.
 

Enterprise Technology Spotlight
Google May Add Facebook, Twitter Links to Gmail
Google will reportedly roll more social-networking features into Gmail, the fastest-growing e-mail service. The new features could save users the trouble of switching to Facebook or Twitter.
 
IBM's New POWER7 Servers Save Energy with Big Loads
IBM has unveiled high-capacity servers that are the first to be based on its new, multi-core POWER7 chip. It said the new line is designed "to manage the most demanding emerging applications."
 
IBM Opens Eco-Friendly, Cloud-Focused Data Center
IBM has opened its latest data center in North Carolina. Big Blue said the $362 million facility in Research Triangle Park is designed to support cloud computing and other new computing models.
 

Navigation
Sci-Tech Today
Home/Top News | Computing | Digital Life | Discovery | Space | Innovation | Health | Science News
Environment
NewsFactor Network Enterprise I.T. Sites
NewsFactor Technology News | Enterprise Security Today | CRM Daily

NewsFactor Business and Innovation Sites
Sci-Tech Today | NewsFactor Business Report

NewsFactor Services
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | Free Whitepapers | XML/RSS Feed

About NewsFactor Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Careers @ NewsFactor | Services for PR Pros | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2010 NewsFactor Network. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo.