01 Apr 2020 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
SHANGHAI (AFP) - Huawei said yesterday it had sustained solid growth in its global businesses in 2019 despite a US campaign to isolate the Chinese tech giant, but warned of its “most difficult year” ahead.
The stark warning came as a result of stringent US sanctions, with their impact worsened by the fallout from the deadly coronavirus pandemic.
Huawei - the world’s top supplier of telecom networking equipment and number-two smartphone maker behind Samsung said group revenue expanded 19.1 percent last year to 858 billion yuan (US$ 120 billion), a nearly identical growth rate to that seen in 2018.
Net profit last year, however, grew 5.6 percent, compared with 25 percent in 2018, as a result of the US sanctions.
Eric Xu, the firm’s rotating chairman, said, “After Huawei was added to the US entity list on May 16... we had to step up investment in research and development to fix the gaps.”
“All of a sudden, a large number of suppliers could not supply to us, and we had to rebuild our supply chain,” he told a press conference yesterday.
“Under such circumstances, it was impossible for us to continue maintaining as high a growth rate in our net profit as in 2017 and 2018.”
But he noted the company turned in a strong performance “despite enormous outside pressure”.
He warned, however, that 2020 would be Huawei’s “most difficult year”, given that it would be subject to entity-listing for the full year.
While the firm had substantial stockpiles to respond to customer needs last year, these are running low and 2020 would be a “test of Huawei’s supply continuity programme”.
On top of that, the company has to grapple with the coronavirus pandemic, which has brought about global economic decline, financial turmoil and slowing market demand, Xu said.
He added it would be tough to make a forecast on the company’s full-year outlook for now.
Huawei has been under relentless pressure from the Washington, which has lobbied allies worldwide to avoid the company’s telecom gear over security concerns, in the shadow of a wider US-China trade conflict.
Washington last year said it would blacklist Huawei from the US market and from buying crucial American components, though it has extended a series of reprieves to allow US businesses time to adjust.
The US blacklisting could prevent Huawei from getting hold of key hardware and software including smartphone chips, and exclude it from the Google Android operating system, which equips the vast majority of smartphones in the world. The company has already seen a hit to consumer business revenue outside of China, which Xu said amounted to at least US$ 10 billion.
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