Telcos

China’s Huawei Claims ‘Crisis is Over’ After Revenue Rise

 

Chinese tech giant Huawei claimed it is well and truly on the comeback trail after it posted a small increase in annual revenue after being knocked back by a series of US export controls and sanctions.

The firm said it was now “out of crisis mode”, adding it was making headway with replacing components affected by Washington’s sanctions thanks to the billions it is spending on research.

The tech conglomerate’s revenue climbed 0.9%, in line with a company forecast, suggesting it has reached some level of stability after successive rounds of US curbs hammered its once mighty smartphone business.

 

Also on AF: China Settles First LNG Trade in Yuan in Latest Hit to Dollar

 

But it posted a net profit of 35.6 billion yuan ($5.18 billion), down some two-thirds from 2021 when profit was helped by the sale of its Honor mid-range smartphone business. The decline was, however, still severe even when compared with 2020 – a drop of 44%.

Top executives of the major supplier of equipment used in 5G telecommunications networks spoke at a news conference about how they had been pushed to “a fatal impasse” and “fought their way out” after Washington restricted its supply of chips and chip-design tools from US companies.

“2022 is the year that we pulled ourselves out of crisis mode. We’re back to business as normal,” said Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou, daughter of the company’s founder.

The US has said Huawei represents a security risk, which it denies. Tension with the US saw Meng detained for three years in Canada over alleged efforts to cover up attempts by Huawei-linked companies to sell equipment to Iran in breach of US sanctions.

Charges against Meng were dismissed and she returned to China in 2021. Huawei rotates its chairperson every six months and Meng is set to take up the position on Saturday.

 

Huawei R&D Spending Surge

R&D spending over the year rose 13.2% to 161.5 billion yuan ($23.50 billion), equivalent to a quarter of company revenue.

Such spending helped Huawei with replacing components in its products that were hit by US trade sanctions, Meng said. Founder Ren Zhengfei told a university in February they had replaced more than 13,000 parts.

Chairman Eric Xu said they saw areas such as green development as opportunities and were investing in 5.5th and 6th generation technology, with the hope that they may be able to start rolling out 5.5G products by 2025.

Xu, asked about recent comments about breakthroughs in electronic design automation (EDA) tools for chips produced at and above 14-nanometre technology, said the company had achieved that with its partners and that meant that Huawei could use its own EDA tools to design chips.

 

Enterprise Division Revenue Soars

Like Huawei, China’s semiconductor industry has been the target of US export controls measures and the company will render support to industry efforts to become more self-reliant, he said, without providing details.

Revenue for 2022 came in at 642.3 billion yuan. While that represented mild growth over 2021, it was still far below the record 891.3 billion yuan logged in 2019 when it was the top Android smartphone vendor globally.

Revenue from the enterprise division soared 30%, that of its telecommunications business inched up 0.9% while sales for its consumer electronic business tumbled 11.9%.

Huawei’s asset-to-liability ratio was 58.9% and it had a net cash balance of 176.3 billion yuan.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean O’Meara

 

Read more:

Huawei Beats US Sanctions With Chip Tool Breakthrough

China to Check US Chip-Maker Micron Products in Security Review

Huawei Replaces 13,000 US-Banned Parts as it Fights Back

 

 

Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.

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