fbpx

Type to search

Huawei’s New Pura 70 Phone Arrives Amid Interest in Chips

Fans lined up at Huawei stores in big Chinese cities on Thursday to buy the new P70 phones, which analysts expect will have an advanced locally-made chip


The Huawei Pura 70 series shows the Harmony operating system as models go on sale in its flagship store in Beijing (Reuters).

 

New high-end phones made by Chinese tech giant Huawei went on sale on Thursday amid interest in the chips they contain.

Analysts expect the Pura 70 smartphones, known as the P70, have an advanced locally-made chip like its predecessor, the Mate 60 handset.

The Pura series developed by the Shenzhen-based company has advanced cameras and is known for its sleek design, while the Mate series emphasises performance and business features.

 

ALSO SEE: TSMC Posts 9% Profit Rise Amid ‘Insatiable’ AI Chip Demand

 

The launch of Huawei’s Mate 60 series last year was celebrated by Chinese state media as a triumph over US sanctions on the firm, as the handsets contain an advanced China-made chip that is considered only a few generations behind cutting-edge chips used by Western tech giants like Apple and Google in terms of computing power.

Huawei teased the Pura’s sale this week in a rebranding campaign renaming it from simply “P”.

The Pura 70 series has four variants: the 70, the 70 Plus, the 70 Pro and the 70 Ultra. The starting price for the Pura 70 series is 5,499 yuan (just over $760).

The Pro and Ultra versions were available to customers on Thursday, while the Plus and base versions will begin sales on Monday (April 22).

The Pro and Ultra versions were out of stock at Huawei’s official online store just a minute after the sales started. Hundreds of the brand’s fans have lined up at Huawei flagship stores across the country in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.

About 100 customers queuing at the flagship store in Shenzhen were handed bottles of water as they awaited their purchases when Reuters visited on Thursday. Buyers at the store in Shanghai were required to open the box and register the device at the store, possibly in an effort to prevent customers from onselling the phones at a higher price.

Huawei staff also told some of the fans in the lines that there was no guarantee they could get the device on Thursday because demand was high.

 

Focus on chips amid geopolitical rivalry

The launch of the Mate 60 Pro last August sparked a spike in Huawei’s smartphone sales. According to research firm Counterpoint, in the first six weeks of 2024, Huawei saw unit sales rise by 64% year-on-year. Meanwhile, Apple’s iPhone sales in China fell 24% during the same period.

Ivan Lam, a senior analyst at Counterpoint, said he expected shipments of about 60 million units of the Pura 70 series this year, which would add important momentum to Huawei’s smartphone sales.

“Initial sales are expected to be really good. There may be some shortage at various channels. But supply will be much better compared to when the Mate 60 was launched. We don’t expect any longlasting shortage,” he said.

Huawei’s Kirin 9000S chip was reportedly manufactured by China’s SMIC (Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation) despite US export restrictions seeking to limit Beijing’s chip-making capabilities.

It was seen as a symbol of China’s technological resurgence despite Washington’s ongoing efforts to cripple its capacity to produce advanced semiconductors.

The Biden administration began a review of the chip earlier this year and said last month that SMIC might have violated US export rules, while adding it was still evaluating the situation. Questions have surfaced about whether SMIC illegally obtained US tools to make the chip.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

ALSO SEE:

Huawei Signals New High-End Smartphone After Mate 60 Success

China’s SMIC May Have Breached US Curbs With Huawei Chip

US Targets China’s Top Chip Plant Over Huawei Mate 60 Pro Coup

SMIC, Huawei Big Winners as China Ramps Up Chip Funding

China’s Top Chipmaker SMIC Predicts Modest 2024 Recovery

Huawei, SMIC Set to Defy US Sanctions With 5nm Chips: FT

Probe Into US Chip Equipment Maker’s Gear Sent to China’s SMIC

Huawei Sells 1.6m Mate 60 Phones in Six Weeks as Apple Falters

For China Users, an Apple vs Huawei Battle is Picking up Pace

Huawei Keeps Mum on China-Made Chips Behind Mate 60 Phones

Huawei Unit Seen Shipping Chinese-Made Surveillance Chips

New Huawei Phone Spurs Fear China Got Around US Chip Curbs

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

logo

AF China Bond