Huawei founder urges Honor to compete with its former parent
Yesterday, Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei addressed Honor employees leaving Huawei and urged them to work hard so that the budget line can eventually surpass its former parent company. That will be a tough task considering that Huawei is currently the second largest smartphone manufacturer in the world. During the speech, Ren said that although Huawei could find a way around the punishments, it could cost millions of Honor’s agents and sales people their jobs. “We don’t have to drag innocent people into the water just because we suffer,” the executive stated. He added that after the “divorce,” Huawei should be Honor’s biggest competitor adding that surpassing its former parent should be Honor’s “slogan for motivation.” He also said to Honor’s workers that “We are your competitors in the future.” Counterpoint Research analyst Flora Tang says that there is hope for Honor if it can resume production. Industry sources say that Huawei’s rivals in China are taking advantage of U.S. actions against Huawei by ramping up production while Huawei is unable to build new phones. Of the 51.7 million handsets that Huawei built in the third quarter (July through September), 26% or 13.4 million of these phones had the Honor brand.
During the speech yesterday, Ren said, “Wave after wave of severe U.S. sanctions against Huawei has led us to finally understand, certain American politicians want to kill us, not just correct us.” On January 20th, after President-Elect Joe Biden is sworn in as the 46th U.S. president, U.S. policy toward Chinese tech companies could be relaxed. Already there have been reports that popular short-form video app TikTok no longer faces being outlawed in the U.S. It will be interesting to see whether the new administration continues to ban Huawei devices and networking equipment in the states based on the concern-never proven-that Huawei uses backdoors on its products to collect data from U.S. consumers and corporations and shares it with government workers in Beijing.