02 Mar Apple dealers in China sell iPhone 15 Pro Max at US$160 discount, as rivals like Huawei lure away high-end consumers
Apple-authorised retailers are offering steep discounts on the latest iPhone series in China, in a fresh round of promotions aimed at reviving sales there, as the Californian tech giant faces stiff competition from domestic brands, such as Huawei Technologies.
The top-of-the-line iPhone 15 Pro Max, launched last September, is selling for 8,849 yuan (US$1,230) on Alibaba Group Holding’s e-commerce platform Tmall and rival JD.com, roughly 1,150 yuan cheaper than the original price.
Alibaba is the owner of the South China Morning Post.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday.
The iPhone discounts are in line with expectations, said Toby Zhu, senior analyst at market research firm Canalys, adding that Apple should be aware of its growing inventory of iPhones, which have been expanding since the end of last year.
The new promotions underscore the mounting pressure that Apple is under in China, as local smartphone manufacturers jostle for bigger shares of the premium handset segment, according to analysts.
“Apple is feeling the competition from local vendors, as companies including Huawei move towards the premium category,” said Guo Tianxiang, senior analyst at market consultancy IDC China.
iPhone sales have been weak since the beginning of this year, while premium Android handsets – defined as those priced at above 4,000 yuan – have seen strong demand, according to IDC’s Guo.
Consumers are swayed by the narrowing gap between functions offered by the iPhone and those by high-end Android models, he said. While iPhone models in the past few years had only incremental upgrades, their Android counterparts have been making technological strides.
Can Apple fend off rivals in China as consumers crave AI and foldable designs?
Can Apple fend off rivals in China as consumers crave AI and foldable designs?
The iPhone is contending with structural changes in the sector, such as the emergence of a new paradigm in premium mobile phone design, according to a research note in January by Kuo Ming-chi, an analyst at TF International Securities known for his accurate assessment of the Apple supply chain.
Those transformations will lead to a continuous decline in iPhone shipments in the Chinese market this year, he said.
Apple reported a nearly 13 per cent drop in revenue from Greater China – which includes the mainland, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan – in the December quarter.