Huawei said to cut smartphone output by 60 per cent in 2021 as US sanctions bite

  • The Chinese telecoms giant has told suppliers it will order fewer smartphone components this year, the Nikkei reports
  • Sanctions from the Trump era continue to block Huawei’s access to chips and other key US technologies

People wait in line in front of Huawei's flagship store for presales of the newly launched Huawei Mate40 mobile phone series in Shanghai, China, on October 23, 2020. Photo: AFP

Huawei Technologies Co has told suppliers that its orders for smartphone components will drop by more than 60 per cent this year as it continues to struggle under harsh US sanctions, the Nikkei newspaper reported on Thursday, citing unnamed sources at multiple suppliers.

The Chinese telecoms equipment and handset giant said it intends to procure parts for between 70 million to 80 million smartphones in 2021, the Nikkei reported. This marks a dramatic decline from the 189 million smartphones that Huawei shipped last year, according to figures from market research firm IDC. Huawei’s orders have consisted solely of components for 4G smartphones since US restrictions have prevented the company from buying components for 5G devices. Some suppliers reportedly anticipated the final orders to fall further to around 50 million units.

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