Log in to your IBTimes Account

close
ID
Password
  • Set your IBTimes.com Edition

Apple, China Mobile call off iPhone launch talks



By Vinicy Chan
14 January 2008 @ 08:32 am ET

HONG KONG - Apple Inc and China Mobile have called off talks to launch the U.S. firm's popular iPhones in China, dashing investor speculation that the device will hit store shelves soon and sending China Mobile shares down.

Related Topic

Get stories by e-mail on this topic.

E-mail:

Investors had cheered Apple possibly winning access to China Mobile's 350 million subscribers -- more than the population of the United States -- and news of talks over the device's potential launch in the world's largest telecoms market helped Apple's stock climb more than 10 percent on November 13.

Shares in China Mobile, the world's largest mobile phone operator, slid nearly 3 percent after Monday's announcement to HK$130.

Analysts had expected talks to fail at least initially, predicting that both parties would eventually lock horns over revenue sharing and a plethora of technical difficulties.

"It's not a surprise. China Mobile doesn't want to share its non-voice revenue," said Duncan Clark, chairman of BDA China, a Beijing-based telecoms research consultancy. "The two have very strong egos and, as in any relationship, that often doesn't work."

The iPhone, a cellphone that allows Internet access and plays music, sells for about $500 in the United States -- about double the average monthly salary in China.

Experts said last year the iPhone would have to navigate a spate of technical, content and fee issues unique to China, including a standard revenue-sharing agreement that China Mobile would be sure to dislike, before any launch could proceed.

The iPhone, one of the hottest gadgets to hit stores in the United States and Europe in 2007, might also be incompatible with China because of its "locked" SIM card. That meant it would not be able to piggyback another operator's network.

"Our parent has terminated talks with Apple over the iPhone," a China Mobile spokeswoman said, confirming several unsourced Internet reports.

RESURRECTION?

Lei would not elaborate except to say that China Mobile had not ruled out reviving discussions at some stage, if necessary.

It is unclear what Apple, which has declined to comment on the issue, planned to do in China next. Apple was not immediately available for comment.

China Unicom, the smaller of the country's two wireless carriers, said in 2007 it had no plans to bring the device into the country, but was open to the idea.

Apart from China, Apple had also initiated talks with NTT DoCoMo Inc and Softbank Corp to bring its multimedia device to Japan, though sources at both firms said revenue-sharing was again a hotly contested issue.

Globally, Apple has chosen France Telecom's Orange, Deutsche Telekom's T-Mobile and Spanish Telefonica-ownedO2 in Britain to bring the iPhone -- which combines Apple's iPod music player, a video player and a Web browser -- to Europe.

(Writing by Edwin Chan; editing by Anne Marie Roantree & Jan Dahinten)

Copyright 2009 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.

    Click!
  • Rate this article:

Comments

Post Your Comment

*Name


advertisement
More Technology
China Telecom aims to sell BlackBerry handsets and Palm smartphones in China by early next year, as it tries to gain share from its two larger mobile tel...
Dutch telecoms group KPN agreed improved terms for the takeover of iBasis, securing the control it needs to turn around the loss-making global top-three ...
German mobile operator O2 plans to end its roaming agreement with Deutsche Telekom unit T-mobile at year end, O2's German head told a German newspaper.

advertisement
Advertisement
POS Magnetic Card Readers

Online distributor for point of sale equipment, TYSSO and Pegasus.

 
IBTimes.com Web
Partners
International Business Times© 2009 The Ibtimes Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms of service | Privacy Policy | Advertising | About Us | Contact Us | Archives