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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (62753)4/18/2007 3:55:24 AM
From: waitwatchwander  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 197215
 
The Coming Upheaval In the Chinese Handset Market
Posted on Apr 11th, 2007

David Wolf submits: The National Development and Reform Commission, China's super-ministry whose purpose is to drive the nation's economy forward, has just issued final approval for four new Chinese consumer electronics companies to begin making handsets, adding to the 80-odd manufacturers already in the market. You could argue that the last thing China needs is another four mobile handset manufacturers. And you'd probably be right. People far wiser than I have been saying for a long time that there is a major shakeout coming in this market, and that in the end the 80 odd device makers will probably be whittled down to a round dozen or so. Continued at: china.seekingalpha.com

Mq ---> Sanyo is outsourced to benQ ????

There is nothing in the article that you linked about this matter and Google sees zippo. Where did you discover this thought?



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (62753)4/18/2007 6:12:25 AM
From: waitwatchwander  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 197215
 
Sanyo's mobile division may be flogged off
Result of Nokia JV fall-out

By Tony Dennis: Tuesday 17 April 2007, 12:40

AS NEWS that Sanyo has appointed Golman Sachs to sell its semiconductor business got out, rumours are also spreading that the company's mobile phone division may be up for grabs, too. One of the factors behind the suggestion that the handset division might be sold off is the very public failure of an intended joint venture with Nokia to sell cdmaOne phones.

Ironically, the relationship between the two handset vendors – announced on Valentine's day 2006, had gone sour by late June. Nokia's excuse was that, "In addition to an already financially prohibitive CDMA ecosystem in general, recent developments may indicate that the CDMA emerging markets business case is looking more challenging. "

There was intense Press speculation at the time that the terms set down by Qualcomm for making cdmaOne and CDMA2000 handsets were far too onerous for Nokia to stomach.

Qualcomm put out an immediate denial. Steve Altman, Qualcomm president, said, "As far as news articles reporting or implying that Qualcomm's licensing terms resulted in the failure of Nokia to complete its previously announced joint venture with Sanyo, these are simply untrue.

The joint venture company was planning to operate under Sanyo's existing CDMA license agreement with Qualcomm, and no changes to the existing license agreement were required or requested.

The company added that, "The CDMA2000 handset business is highly competitive with participation from many capable manufacturers of all sizes around the world due in large measure to Qualcomm's widespread licensing and multi-tiered supply of enabling chipsets and software."

That doesn't seem to have helped Sanyo very much. According to Strategy Analytics - LG, Samsung and Motorola are the leading suppliers of CDMA handsets worldwide, not Sanyo.

So Sanyo has been only mildly successful in the cdmaOne world and its efforts to crack the European market haven't appeared to go much better. For example, it produced a W-CDMA handset, the S750, for Orange using Qualcomm chips. It's faded away since.

That just leaves Sanyo's home market, Japan, where it recently landed a deal to supply KDDI with handsets for the USA market. Better than nothing.

However, the CDG's [CDMA industry body] reaction to the failure of the Sanyo/Nokia joint venture was very interesting. Whilst pointing out that there were at the time some 50 different vendors offering over 1,250 devices for CDMA2000, it added, "In this highly competitive market, consolidation is expected."

And it appears that another victim of that consolidation (after Siemens) may well be Sanyo. µ

theinquirer.net