Huawei Set for Continued Challenges in 2022

Guo Ping, Huawei's Rotating Chairman at the Better World Summit  2020

Guo Ping, Huawei's Rotating Chairman at the Better World Summit 2020

Emma Okonji
The Rotating Chairman, Huawei Technologies, Guo Ping has highlighted the positives in an annual internal New Year’s message, noting its carrier business remained stable as the enterprise segment booked solid growth in 2021.

He however said the total revenue was expected to drop 28.9 per cent year-on-year to $99.9 billion.
According t9 him turnover in the final quarter in 2021, continued to be hammered by US trade sanctions on its consumer business, with smartphone sales plummeting after the divestment of its sub-brand Honor.

Guo acknowledged 2022 will come with its fair share of challenges, while explaining that a changing external environment won’t cause it to alter its ideals or aspirations. “We will continue investing in the future and creating value for our customers and partners,” Guo said in his new year message.
He noted cost-cutting won’t pave the way to sustainable survival: “Only through strategic investment can we grow stronger and build a future for ourselves.”
He added Huawei device business expanded swiftly into new business domains in which its ability to secure chip supplies was not restricted.

With trade restrictions and equipment bans in many countries curbing its core telecom and handset businesses, the company has diversified into the automotive sector. Last week, it said the first electric car with its HarmonyOS operating system would begin deliveries in February.

In a statement, Huawei’s chief representative to the EU Institutions, Tony Jin, noted the company ranked as the second highest private-sector investor in Research and Development (R&D) in the world, citing data from the European Commission Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard 2021.

R&D spending in 2020 reached CNY141.9 billion, representing 15.9 per cent of total revenue.
Revenue for the first nine months of 2021, however fell 32 per cent to CNY455.8 billion. Turnover in 2020 rose 3.8 per cent to CNY891 billion, according to Jin.

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