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A man tests wearable devices on a sensor-filled treadmill at Huawei Technologies Co’s health research laboratory in Xian, capital of northwest China’s Shaanxi province. Photo: Handout

Huawei ramps up wearables effort with focus on health care amid push into new growth areas

  • China’s largest technology company is undertaking three health research programmes for its wearables business
  • These are focused on hypertension management, body temperature and coronary heart disease
Huawei
Huawei Technologies Co plans to sharpen the focus of its wearables research and development on health care, as the world’s largest telecommunications equipment maker pushes into new growth areas amid its struggles with US trade sanctions.
The initiative could also enable Huawei to catch up with Xiaomi Corp, the world’s second-biggest wearables vendor behind Apple.

Shenzhen-based Huawei is undertaking three health research programmes on hypertension management, body temperature and coronary heart disease, the company announced at an online event on Saturday.

It did not say when features based on that research will be integrated with its line of wearable devices – including smartwatches, smart bands and eyewear – but aims to build a “strong barrier” to entry for competitors in the industry, according to a Huawei statement.

A Huawei spokeswoman said the company has no further comment beyond the statement.

“The whole industry is expecting [wearable] products which can really help consumers better manage their health [concerns], especially chronic diseases that both young and old people are likely to get,” said Jason Low, an analyst at tech research firm Canalys. “But there is still a long way to go because this requires a lot of R&D investment, as well as cooperation between smart hardware and technology companies.”

Huawei Technologies Co’s Watch GT 2 Pro. Photo: Handout
The latest move by Huawei – the world’s No 3 wearables vendor in the third quarter last year, according to research firm IDC – shows the company continuing to double down on other growth areas amid its difficulties with rigid US trade restrictions, which have affected the supply of hardware and software components for its core smartphone and networking equipment businesses.

“By not relying on Google for its watches and with many components coming from non-US vendors, the negative impact to Huawei‘s wearables business has been less than in other tech categories,” IDC reported last month.

Huawei’s wearables effort also reflects the intention of Ren Zhengfei, the company’s 76-year-old founder and chief executive, to stay committed to research and development, despite the US sanctions.

“We invest US$20 billion into research and development every year, but income is only 40 per cent of the input, as 60 per cent [of investment] is burnt like candles in the dark,” Ren said in a recent speech. “But we are not complaining. We can bring light to others just like leading European, American, Japanese and Russian businesses did.”

Ren said it was important for Huawei to simplify its product lines and focus on generating profit to survive US trade restrictions.

Huawei has more than 13 research centres around the world, covering smart wearable devices-related design, software and hardware development and health research.

Huawei moves into smart vehicles as US sanctions stymie 5G, semiconductor ambitions

Huawei’s lines of smart wearable devices, including its Watch GT 2 Pro launched last year, have functions such as heart rate, blood oxygen saturation and pressure monitoring.

The global wearables market reached 125 million units in the third quarter last year, up 35.1 per cent from the same period in 2019, according to IDC. Huawei shipped 13.7 million units in the third quarter, behind Apple’s 41.4 million total and 17 million from Xiaomi.

Consumer spending on electronics has increased the past several months as spending on travel, dining out and other leisure activities decreased during the pandemic. This shift in spending was a catalyst for growth in the global wearables market, according to IDC.

“Consider what this means: a larger installed base of wearable device users going forward and a larger opportunity for device replacements in the years to come,” said Ramon Llamas, a research director for mobile devices at IDC, said in a report.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Huawei to focus on health care wearables
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