Xiaomi Considers Introducing Laptop to Compete With
Apple
Xiaomi Corp. is considering the
introduction of its first laptop early next year, people with direct knowledge
of the matter said, opening a new front in its battle against Apple Inc. and
Lenovo Group Ltd.
Xiaomi’s notebook may go on sale in
the first quarter to compete with such premium computers as Apple’s MacBook Air
and Lenovo’s ThinkPad, the people said, asking not to be identified because the
matter is private. Xiaomi has held talks with Samsung
Electronics Co. to supply memory chips, and that initial agreement may extend
to providing displays, the people said.
Only five years after its
founding, Xiaomi vaulted into the global smartphone
industry’s top ranks by providing stylish devices with premium components at
mid-range prices. Xiaomi getting into the PC business
risks bringing additional cost pressures against industry leaders Lenovo,
Hewlett-Packard Co. and Apple.
Supplying Xiaomi,
the fourth-largest smartphone vendor, will boost Samsung’s components business
as its tries to reduce reliance on providing for its own Galaxy devices.
Lenovo dropped as much as 4.3 percent in Hong Kong. Shares of Samsung rose 0.7 percent as of 2:38 p.m. in Seoul.
Xiaomi’s trying to carve out a spot in
a rapidly shrinking market. IDC forecast in August an 8.7 percent
slide in 2015 PC shipments and doesn’t expect a return to growth till 2017.
Smartphone Success
The Chinese company co-founded
by billionaire Lei Jun made its mark with cheaper smartphones sold online
before moving into higher-end devices, buoyed by a thriving online community.
Until now, its other hardware forays have been confined to sales of appliances
and accessories such as earphones and TVs.
Xiaomi’s venture into PCs comes as
growth in its core market winds down. Worldwide smartphone sales recorded their
slowest growth rate since 2013 in the second quarter of 2015, according to
Gartner. A rapidly maturing home market has prompted Xiaomi
to look toward India, Brazil and other less-saturated smartphone arenas.
Samsung too is grappling with
slowing sales of its own high-end Galaxy range and in July, it posted a fifth
straight drop in quarterly profit.