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Huawei's Revenue Hits Record $122B in 2019 Despite U.S. Sanctions (techcrunch.com) 130

Huawei reported resilient revenue for 2019 on Tuesday as the embattled Chinese technology group continues to grow despite prolonged American campaign against its business, but cautioned that growth next year could prove more challenging. From a report: Eric Xu, Huawei's rotating chairman, wrote in a New Year's message to employees that the company's revenue has topped 850 billion Chinese yuan ($122 billion) this year, a new record high for the Chinese group and an 18% increase over the previous year. Xu said Huawei, the second largest smartphone maker globally, sold 240 million handsets this year, up from 206 million last year. "These figures are lower than our initial projections, yet business remains solid and we stand strong in the face of adversity," he wrote. He acknowledged that Huawei is confronting a "strategic and long-term" campaign against its business by the U.S. government. If the campaign persists for long, it would create even more "difficult" environment for the 32-year-old firm to "survive and thrive," he said.
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Huawei's Revenue Hits Record $122B in 2019 Despite U.S. Sanctions

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  • by ron_ivi ( 607351 ) <sdotno@cheapcomp ... m ['ces' in gap]> on Monday December 30, 2019 @11:29PM (#59572492)

    The sanctions pretty much say "unlike Cisco, these don't have NSA Spyware".

    This might be the best advertising ever for countries more worried about NSA Spying instead of China's.

    Remember, it wasn't China who wiretapped the German Chancellery.

    https://www.theguardian.com/us... [theguardian.com]

    • by bobby ( 109046 )

      Agreed, and known as the "Streisand Effect" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streisand_effect [wikipedia.org]

    • Remember, it wasn't China who wiretapped the German Chancellery.

      No, but you'd be lying to yourself if you thought China wouldn't have loved to have been the tappers of that sweet sweet wire.

    • They also say, "Look how exposed you are to the whims of the US president and how easily he can exert strong influence on the range of products you have to choose from...best way to avoid that is to avoid products from the USA"

    • How do you know the Chinese didn't also tap her? Why wouldn't they? They've broken in everywhere else.
    • Remember, it wasn't China who wiretapped the German Chancellery.

      How are you so sure Chinese didn't spy them as well?

  • by fred911 ( 83970 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @11:50PM (#59572522) Journal

    Huawei has had a long, long time to correct what experts say the problem is. They just didn't think we had sufficient government to enforce the recommendations. They were given sufficient time and notification as to what would be necessary to play in this sandbox. To this day they haven't complied. They get what they deserve.

    Published Oct, 2012
    https://stacks.stanford.edu/fi... [stanford.edu]

    Here's what the experts say today.
    https://www.theverge.com/2019/... [theverge.com]

    • Didn't they offer to open-source the 5G code? Seems to me they're bending over backwards to sell in the US.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      America set up an impossibly high standard, designed from the start to be impossible to meet.
      There is no way to prove a future update couldn't introduce a backdoor. But that is true of any company from any country.
      America knows this as it has done it itself. It's a complete farce top to bottom.
    • Huawei has had a long, long time to correct what experts say the problem is. They just didn't think we had sufficient government to enforce the recommendations. They were given sufficient time and notification as to what would be necessary to play in this sandbox. To this day they haven't complied. They get what they deserve.

      Published Oct, 2012 https://stacks.stanford.edu/fi... [stanford.edu]

      Here's what the experts say today. https://www.theverge.com/2019/... [theverge.com]

      A professor of marketing and innovation, two law professors and two US senators? ... the only people whose opinion is worth something are the two people with a Comp Sci. background and they are not only merely speculating about how Huawei systems could be a threat, everything they point out could equally apply to US manufacturers dropping the same vulnerabilities into US made telco equipment on behalf of the NSA/CIA etc. From my point of view that is merely a choice of whether I want to be spied on and have

      • Interesting that these "experts" keep citing that other Western government agree with the US assessment. In a certain sense that is true, but that hasn't stopped Germany and the UK from approaching Huawei and reaching their own deals. The UK in particular has had a very interesting approach, they started their own agency to assess and work with Huawei to mitigate or confirm any fears and also any vulnerabilities. Their most recent report [service.gov.uk] isn't very encouraging but the is nothing found about back doors or sp
  • Good thing we're teaching them a lesson.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Prove me wrong. First you have to prove that $122B is not made up. Maybe they are using Enron accounting methods, who knows.

    They are a Chinese company in bed with the Chinese government. Economic numbers coming from China must make the state look good or you get arrested [theguardian.com]..

    • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
      Hmm Enron, iirc the SEC OKed the mark to market counting (I'm not an accountant but beeing allowed to book profits before they occur strikes me as a bit odd), not saying that Enron did not fake things, but the SEC has to take some of the blame. AAnd I'm ot again. we are bashing China and Huawei here and yea the state sponsoring buisness to make the numbers look good is highly questionable
  • ...how profitable Huawei's profitability has anything to do with their treachery
  • I'm using a Huawei mate 20 (regular, curved screens can die)

    I believe it has a 7nm processor, it's very fast, it's got ridiculous battery length and I replace my base launcher with Nova on all my phone's anyhow.

    The feature set is insane

    Wifi hot spot, with data limit (4g)
    Wifi hot spot repeater (share another wifi signal)
    Super fast charging
    Samsung duo / emui desktop thing over USB C, wth keyboard monitor support etc
    Reverse charging (use it as a power bank)
    Extremely wide angle photos
    NOT A DAMN CURVED SCREEN, B

    • Heaphone jack so that you can have a dangly tangled cable bouncing around, getting in the way. No thanks. I've been using bluetooth for years and would never go back to untangling cables. Bluetooth is way better for running and for the gym. I sit at a desk all day at work, so no issues with battery as my computer has this thing called a USB port which is slightly less ancient than a 3.5mm dust hole.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • It sounds like you never thought of putting your phone under your hat.

          What hat? Wearing a hat while running sounds even more annoying than corded headphones. I used to run with annoying corded headphones, but have never run while wearing a hat (and generally wouldn't wear a hat while not running either, though I will wear a hooded jacket in cold weather.)

          I've run literally several thousand miles while wearing Bluetooth headphones and they are vastly better than wired headphones. However, I will mention that it took me a while to find the correct Bluetooth headphones. I went t

    • Offtopic eh? Someone is very jaded / angry I don't like Samsung anymore?
      Very on topic.

  • I'll never buy one. Good for China that people there take pride in local products and buy local. Then there are the countries that do business with China and take loans from them. Good luck with that you guys! All the best!

  • The 240m Mobile devices suggests about half from that segment. Rest from infrastructure, services , software , other?
  • The US is a big player, but there are plenty of other markets to sell to. In fact when it comes to smartphones there are countries like India with bigger populations and a faster growing smartphone market. The US phone market is already saturated and quite stagnant. People already have expensive phones and aren't as willing to fork out for a new one. Developing countries want powerful phones for cheap and that's where Huawei and some other better value brands come in.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

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