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Opinion / Apple’s iPhone 12 faces fierce competition from Chinese smartphone brands Huawei, Xiaomi and Oppo – here’s why consumers are unimpressed

Apple recently debuted its new iPhone 12 in China, but netizens have criticised its high price and negatively compared it to domestic brands. Photo: Reuters
Apple recently debuted its new iPhone 12 in China, but netizens have criticised its high price and negatively compared it to domestic brands. Photo: Reuters
Apple

Apple was once a luxury status symbol in the Chinese market, but that’s changing – better tech, better marketing, and a rising sense of nationalism are pushing Chinese buyers towards domestic brands

The new iPhone 12 has been released in China, but consumers aren’t happy.

Apple’s new smartphone launch was off to a bad start from the get-go: first the product’s release was delayed worldwide, then the brand’s iPhone 12 live-stream was made unavailable on Chinese video and social media platforms at the eleventh hour with no explanation.

And after much anticipation – China is Apple’s second-largest market by revenue – when Apple finally debuted its latest model in China on October 14, the new phone ultimately received a mixed reception within the Chinese market.

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The #iPhone12 tag trended on Weibo, reaching over six billion views, but many netizens either criticised the phone over its high price tag – which does not include accessories – or negatively compared it to domestic players Huawei and Xiaomi, both of which also released competitive phone models recently. Chinese consumers also doubt the environmental angle that Apple has pushed.

A poll by Caijing Magazine inquiring whether respondents would buy the new iPhone 12 revealed a split in buyer intentions: 10,000 users voted no, and 9,269 said yes. Meanwhile, a little over 5,400 users were still on the fence. And those who plan to buy the new phone are also willing to put off a phone upgrade until the upcoming Double 11 – an unofficial holiday for singles and popular shopping season – which would see sales hit popular e-commerce sites Tmall and JD.com.

 
Apple’s iPhone used to be highly coveted in China simply because it is a foreign brand, which was in line with China’s imported consumerism trend. It has become a symbol of social status and economic success with every yearly upgrade. The American smartphone maker has acknowledged its position in its hurried reopening of all 42 stores in China during the country’s first sign of post-pandemic recovery. This year, the brand reaped a 225 per cent iPhone sales increase in China from the first to second quarter, due in part to its cheaper iPhone SE model and discounts to spur spending during the midyear shopping festivals and national holidays.
But the reception of Apple’s new product launches has been diminishing over the years, and the Chinese appetite for Apple hype has been waning. This has been especially true over the past two years when the American brand lacked 5G capabilities, unlike domestic brands. Rising US-China trade war tensions and the recent push to ban WeChat in the US have also repelled many Chinese users against Apple as a response, driving patriotism and support for domestic brands instead.

The diminished luxury status of the iPhone is a reflection of most foreign brands losing their grip on the evolving Chinese consumer who once worshipped but now boycotts Western brands, reflecting the country’s rising nationalism. And even when other foreign brands’ price points are comparably much lower than domestic brands, the rise of national brand quality has now been deemed more important in the minds of Chinese consumers.