John Koetsier/VentureBeat
The iPhone 5SChina Mobile is huge — the largest mobile network in the world huge, with more than 760 million customers; Apple secured a deal with the mobile network back in September. Analysts told The Wall Street Journal that Apple only sells an average of about two million iPhones in China every month, but there’s no word on how large future shipments would be.
China is the world’s leading smartphone marketplace, snapping up 33% of all worldwide shipments. But Apple sits at seventh place amongst smartphone vendors there, the perceived luxury of Apple’s wares largely drowned out by wave after wave of larger, varied, and (most importantly) dramatically less expensive smartphones from vendors like Samsung, Huawei, and Xiaomi — phones that are all running Google’s Android operating system.
The price difference has consistently proven to be something of a thorn in the side for Apple: New iPhones are dizzyingly expensive in China, largely due to reduced consumer interest in carrier subsidies and tariffs.
That said, this hasn’t stopped Apple from selling out pre-orders, with carrier-subsidized plans letting folks snap up phones for “free” — not a bad deal for devices that would otherwise cost upwards of $700. Should China Mobile offer similarly generous subsidies, and if demand for Apple’s admittedly enticing new iPhones remains at least as eager as pre-orders suggest, Apple could see some success in the Android-dominated Chinese mobile market.
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