Lenovo CEO Yang Yuanqing spoke to both Bloomberg and The Wall Street Journal to explain more about the plans and expectations. The prevailing theory was that Lenovo's success in Asia would be combined with Motorola's brand power in North America and Europe to create a global powerhouse. That is certainly part of the idea, but it seems that Yuanqing also has plans to reintroduce the Motorola brand to China and emerging markets. Of course, Motorola has already begun its move into emerging markets with the Moto G, and Lenovo doesn't want to interrupt those plans, but to expand on them.
Lenovo will not be abandoning the premium market either. Lenovo obviously is banking on the brand name of Motorola to be worth the majority of the $2.91 billion it spent on acquiring the company, and it knows how much money Motorola has lost for Google (almost $2.4 billion in less than two years of operation). But, Lenovo is confident that it can lower material costs and supply chain, "turn around" Motorola in just a couple quarters, and make the company profitable again in the end.
We assume that at the very least Google believes in Lenovo's plans, which is why it agreed to sell Motorola ...
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