Xiaomi Corp. really wants to shed its down-market image. China’s No. 2 smartphone maker is counting on its most expensive device yet to face off against Huawei Technologies Co. and Apple Inc. at home while carving out a bigger footprint in Europe.
The Chinese smartphone maker yesterday unveiled the MIX 3, the fourth generation of a series introduced in 2016. Xiaomi’s latest effort to acquire a premium gloss features a bezel-less 6.4-inch screen, Qualcomm Inc. processors and slick ceramic body. It now sports front-facing cameras on a sliding structure nestled behind the screen, doing away with the notch popularized by the iPhone.
The device will go on sale from November starting at 3,299 yuan (USD475) and going all the way up to 4,999 yuan for a “Forbidden City” special edition. It marks Chairman Lei Jun’s effort to make greater headway into a more profitable premium market dominated by Apple, Samsung, and – to an increasing extent – Chinese rival Huawei. That’s where customers have deeper pockets to pay for services such as music and games that Xiaomi deems the future of its business.
Beijing-based Xiaomi is trying to steal market share from Huawei, the leader in China – especially in the 3,000 yuan-plus market thanks to its P and Mate series gadgets. It also wants to build a bigger presence in Europe, a stepping stone to the U.S. Both are vital to sustaining its pace of revenue growth. Xiaomi disclosed yesterday that phone shipments for the year had surpassed 100 million units – overtaking 2017’s total – but much of that would have come from cheaper models in India and elsewhere.
The MIX 3 will sport the usual AI-powered bells and whistles, such as auto-background blur for selfies. Xiaomi’s marquee device also sports an AMOLED screen, Snapdragon 845 chipset and 24-megapixel front-facing dual camera. But it may have a ways to go to wrest interest from Apple’s and Huawei’s latest models – Lei yesterday mostly pitted the MIX 3 against the older iPhone X and Huawei’s P20.
Regardless, Xiaomi needs the MIX 3 to be a hit. The smartphone vendor wrapped up a $5.4 billion initial public offering in July, only to find itself under intense scrutiny from investors over valuations comparable to higher-growth internet giants such as Facebook Inc. Pressured further by the uncertainty surrounding U.S.-Chinese tensions, Xiaomi has lost roughly $13 billion or about a quarter of its market value since its debut. Bloomberg
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