
Worn down by a brutally competitive local market dominated by cheaper handsets from both domestic and larger foreign manufacturers, Kyocera's throwing in the towel and leaving the Chinese market behind. President Makoto Kawamura revealed that its Chinese phone business, a joint venture with a local manufacturing firm, has lost between ¥700 and ¥800 million (about $6.55 to $7.49 million) every year since its inception in 2001, so it's giving up to concentrate on the Japanese and North American markets along with its
shiny new acquisition from Sanyo. Pulling out ain't cheap, though: the company is ceding 45 percent of its 70 percent joint venture stake back to the manufacturer, the remainder to a Hong Kong-based company, and writing off about ¥850 million ($7.96 million) in debt. Maybe they'd have fared better
making fake Touches? We're just throwing out ideas here.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Fernando @ Feb 3rd 2008 8:46PM
peace peace peace
I'm loving it
damn that tv ad
Zhiming Mo @ Feb 3rd 2008 11:17PM
hey, that map's missing TAIWAN...CHINA is not the NE Patriot!!! It's 19-0!!!
Jamar @ Feb 4th 2008 7:08AM
Kyocera's mistake was sticking the low-end. Unlike for America, however, they made it all in-house, so their stuff was much less crappy than was expected of a low-end phone.
However, with people after nice phones like the N95 and various imported Japanese phones (DoCoMo's 905i series is the latest to have been unlocked) Kyocera stuck to making low-end bricks from old Japanese tu-ka models. If they tried selling any of the phones they made for AU in the Chinese market they wouldn't have lost so much.