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        China Daily Website

        Will China embrace a gold iPhone?

        Updated: 2013-08-23 11:28
        ( Agencies)

        Will China embrace a gold iPhone?

        A man uses Apple's iPhone as he holds prayer beads at an antique shop in Beijing, in this July 31, 2013 file photo. [Photo/Agencies]

        BEIJING - If Apple hopes to woo more Chinese by adding a glitzy coating - some call it champagne, some gold - to its next iPhone, it may be in for a surprise.

        While gold is hugely popular as a safe haven and a status symbol - China is set to overtake India as the world's biggest gold consumer this year - shoppers at an Apple store in Beijing weren't all convinced it should be coupled with that pinnacle of mobile gadgetry.

        Ni Suyang, a 49-year old worker at a Beijing state-owned enterprise, said that color mattered less to her than the glass surface and silver metallic finish.

        "A gold color looks high-end but is a little tacky," she said.

        Gold and mobile phones are not strangers. Britain's Gold & Co makes gold-plated iPhones, iPads and BlackBerrys which it also sells in India and China.

        In Shenzhen many small local brands make gold-plated feature phones and smartphones. The less well-heeled can adorn their devices with jewel-studded and gold phone covers.

        Apple's decision to add a champagne or gold covered iPhone to its range - confirmed by supply chain sources in Taiwan - would be a departure from its black and white norm.

        Apple could be not reached for comment.

        Commercially it makes sense, said Jerry Zou, Senior VP and Partner at FleishmanHillard, a public relations firm in Beijing. New colors would add "novelty and variety, both of which are key to winning over Chinese consumers".

        A champagne color "would convey an image suggesting high-end luxury but a bit more restrained and subtle".

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