Lenovo continues banking on core business By Li Weitao (China Business Weekly) Updated: 2004-08-17 14:22
China's top PC maker, Lenovo Group Ltd, will continue focusing on its core
business, selling PCs, and key businesses such as handsets, to boost
profitability, a company executive said last week.
Lenovo's decision, earlier this year, to shift its focus back onto its core
business, and the disposal of non-core businesses as part of its restructuring
programme, is paying off, said company President and Chief Executive Officer
Yang Yuanqing.
Lenovo last week reported a better-than-expected, 21.1-per-cent growth,
year-on-year, in net profits in its fiscal first quarter, which ended on June
30.
Its revenues rose 10 per cent.
"The return of our focus to core business has enabled our management team to
concentrate our energy, and capital, (on the profitable business)," Yang said.
Lenovo will continue gradually disposing of its non-core businesses, he said.
"I think we are almost done. Disposal of our non-core businesses will help
Lenovo narrow losses," Yang said.
Lenovo's operating losses at its non-core IT services and motherboard
contract manufacturing business were reduced to HK$19.9 million (US$2.55
million) during the firm's fiscal first quarter.
The firm's losses had previously reached HK$31.6 million (US$4.05 million).
Lenovo last year sold a large stake in its motherboard contract manufacturing
business.
Last month, it transferred its IT (information technology) services to
software firm AsiaInfo Holdings Inc.
Earlier this month, Lenovo formed a joint venture with Sun Media Investment
Holdings Ltd, as part of its pull-out of its Internet portal FM365.
Lenovo's lacklustre performance last year was due largely to its losses in
the handset and motherboard businesses, said company Senior Vice-President Wang
Xiaoyan.
In its fiscal first quarter, Lenovo posted HK$900,000 (US$115,385)in profit
from its nascent mobile phone business.
Handset shipments surged 145.9 per cent, year-on-year, and sales grew 61.3
per cent.
The spike in shipments compared with a 31-per-cent, year-on-year growth,
between April and June, in China's mobile phone market.
Some 15.8 million units of handsets were sold in the quarter, Beijing-based
research house Analysys International said in a report last week.
Compared with the previous quarter, the handset sales volume declined 23 per
cent, the first drop in history, due to intense competition.
Yang said Lenovo's independent research and development has boosted its
handset business.
"Previously, we focused on OEM (original equipment manufacturing), which
offers a profit margin as low as 2-3 per cent," said Yang.
"As in-house-developed phones now account for about 80 per cent of our total
handsets, the gross margin for mobile phones has climbed to 25.06 per cent."
Yang dismissed the notion that Lenovo's business growth is losing steam.
Lenovo has traditionally been one of the darlings in Hong Kong's stock
market, but this year, it has been Hong Kong's worst-performing blue-chip stock.
Investors have been concerned the firm's rivals will erode its share of China's
PC market, and that its growth will be flat.
Yang suggested those investors are short-sighted.
"Lenovo remains a steady, healthy firm, though we missed the target we set
three years ago," he said.
Lenovo, he added, faces a great challenge in boosting its market share.
"(As a market leader), Lenovo needs to make a much greater effort than ever
if we want to increase our market share," he said.
A report released last week by research house Gartner noted Lenovo had
decrowned Hewlett-Packard (HP), during the second quarter, to regain the No 1
position in Asia-Pacific's PC market.
Lenovo held 10.5 per cent of the market during the period, compared with 9.3
per cent in the previous quarter.
HP held 10.3 per cent in the second quarter, compared with 9.7 per cent in
the first quarter.
Lenovo has a 23-per-cent share, the largest, of China's PC market. Its
nearest rival, Founder Technology, has a 9.3-per-cent share.
Lenovo, earlier this month, launched a much-cheaper consumer PC series, using
CPUs (central processing units) made by AMD.
Analysts widely believe the low-price strategy, aimed at tapping the township
and rural markets, will help Lenovo increase its market share.
Insiders said Lenovo had asked Intel, without success, to provide low-price
CPUs for its new PC series.
Tapping China's township and rural markets is a natural choice, as the
penetration of PCs in big cities has reached 60-70 per cent, Yang said.
"If our partner cannot give us support, we will surely choose another," Yang
said.
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