HTC targets US market share as new flagship sales outstrip predecessor
Fri, May 09 2014
HTC expects revenue to land in a range of T$65 billion to T$70 billion in April-June
HTC’s future is not as dependent on its flagship model in advanced markets as it once was, as sales of lower-priced models in emerging economies are growing at an increasing rate. Photo: Reuters
Taipei: Taiwan’s HTC
Corp said it is selling new flagship smartphone One M8 quicker than its
predecessor, and that the strong showing will help it claw back market
share in developed markets such as the US.
HTC’s market share has steadily declined since the company briefly
topped the smartphone market in 2011, exacerbated by sales of previous
flagship One M7 failing to match the phone’s critical acclaim.
HTC is keen to avoid a similar outcome this year by
accompanying the M8 upgrade with “more effective and efficient
marketing,” chief financial officer Chialin Chang said at HTC’s quarterly investor conference on Tuesday.
“In 2014, we intend to sell more units of the M8 than the M7, which was already the best-selling model in HTC history.”
Even so, HTC expects revenue to land in a range of T$65
billion ($2.16 billion) to T$70 billion in April-June, slightly below
the T$71 billion of the same period a year earlier.
That would nevertheless be about double the T$33 billion
booked in January-March, when HTC reported a net loss that was wider
than analysts estimated at T$1.88 billion.
The first quarter finished in March with HTC ending 28
months of on-year sales declines. HTC logged another sales rise in April
indicating strong shipments of the M8, which was released in late March
around a year after the M7.
HTC shipped 3.4 million M7 handsets in the second quarter
of last year compared with expectations of nearly twice that amount,
estimated Yuanta Securities analyst Dennis Chan.
Sales of the M8 have exceeded M7 sales in the same time
frame, Chang said on Tuesday, without providing figures. Chang also said
HTC is likely to break even or book a profit for the first half of the
year.
Shares of HTC closed up 3.6% ahead of the briefing,
reaching a nine-month high on expectations of a strong revenue forecast.
The benchmark Taiwan SE Weighted Index ended up 0.5%.
HTC’s future is not as dependent on its flagship model in
advanced markets as it once was, as sales of lower-priced models in
emerging economies are growing at an increasing rate.
ABHISHEK KUMAR
PGDM 1ST YR
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