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        Business / Companies

        Lenovo challenges Apple, Samsung

        (China Daily) Updated: 2014-01-10 09:36

        "Consumers in China and Latin America are rushing to replace their old models with smartphones," said Anshul Gupta, principal research analyst at Gartner.

        About 48 percent of Chinese mobile phone owners will use a smartphone by the end of 2014, Forrester Research Inc estimated. The figure is expected to increase to 64 percent by 2017.

        In China, Lenovo is the second-largest vendor after Samsung, according to local research firm Analysys International.

        Among the 93 million smartphones sold in the third quarter, Lenovo controlled 11.4 percent of market share, while Samsung had 18.1 percent.

        Liu Jun, vice-president of Lenovo, said the company is eyeing an even bigger market share outside China.

        Lenovo sees the rise of emerging markets as a golden opportunity for its business in the post-PC era. It's quickly expanding operations in Southeast Asian nations including Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore.

        Antonio Wang, associate director at industry consultancy IDC China, said that Lenovo's advances were mostly made via overseas M&A deals at the beginning of 2013.

        "The company was able to use its own research and successful marketing strategy in the mobile devices sector to create huge profits later on," Wang said.

        Yang, Lenovo's CEO, recently announced the opening of a brand-new assembly plant in Wuhan, Hubei province.

        Located in the southeast part of the city, the factory is the world's largest manufacturing facility for Lenovo and a hub for the company's mobile product line, Yang said.

        It will build more than 30 million smartphones and tablets in 2014, representing 40 percent of the company's total output in the mobile sector.

        The plant will also recruit another 4,000 employees this year and will ship out more than 100 million mobile devices once put into full operation.

        "We will largely rely on our own plants to feed global demand for mobile devices," said Liu, Lenovo's vice-president.

        Unlike Apple, which outsources its production, Lenovo makes nearly 70 percent of its mobile devices itself.

        "The company plans to turn the Wuhan plant into the world's largest facility for developing, testing and manufacturing mobile devices," Liu said.

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