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Smartphones: 'Low-key launch' sells 2m iPhone 5s in China
[December 17, 2012]

Smartphones: 'Low-key launch' sells 2m iPhone 5s in China


(Guardian (UK) Via Acquire Media NewsEdge) Apple has confounded Wall Street's expectations by announcing it sold more than 2m iPhone 5s in China after a launch on Friday that observers had thought low-key. Chief executive Tim Cook said the sales - made by online lottery to defeat gangs who buy and resell the handsets - had been "the best first weekend sales ever in China".



Sources including Shanghai Daily said that even if Apple's stores were comparatively quiet, its carrier partners selling the iPhone 5 had a busy weekend, with people signing up to buy the handsets with contracts through China Unicom and China Telecom. Before the launch, China Unicom had 300,000 preorders for the device, compared with 200,000 had for the iPhone 4S in January.

Even so, Apple's stock was downgraded by at least one analyst, as Citi Research cut its recommendation from "buy" to "neutral". Citi Research also lowered its target for the stock to $575 (pounds 355) from $675, saying there was growing competition in smartphones and less excitement around the iPhone 5.


The announcement by Apple seemed calculated to respond to reports on Friday suggesting the lack of queues at its stores meant a lack of interest. In fact the online lottery - instituted after near-riots around the launch in January of the iPhone 4S - meant customers could come into stores at any time to pick up a handset if they were allocated one.

China is the world's largest smartphone market, and growing fast, dominated by cheap devices built on Google's Android software. Apple's key problem is seen as the lack of a contract with China Mobile, the country's largest mobile operator, which has more than 700 million customers.

The iPhone 5 was launched in the US and 30 other countries in September, and will be on sale in more than 100 countries worldwide by the end of December - the company's fastest rollout ever. Charles Arthur (c) 2012 Guardian Newspapers Limited.

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