Published: 14:21, February 9, 2021 | Updated: 02:03, June 5, 2023
China's smartphone shipments rebound to pre-virus levels in Jan
By Reuters

In this undated photo, a man wearing a faca mask checks out a Huawei smartphone at a shop in Beijing. (PHOTO / CHINA NEWS SERVICE)

SHANGHAI - China’s smartphone shipments nearly doubled in January 2021 versus a year ago, government data published on Tuesday showed, rebounding from a coronavirus-induced slump in the beginning of last year.

Shipments of smartphones within China jumped 94.3 percent annually to 39.6 million handsets in January, according to the China Academy of Information and Communications (CAICT)

Shipments of smartphones within China jumped 94.3 percent annually to 39.6 million handsets in January, according to the China Academy of Information and Communications (CAICT), a state-backed think tank.

That was up from 20.4 million in January 2020 and higher than the 32.1 million in January 2019, suggesting China’s smartphone sector has returned to its pre-pandemic levels.

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Supply chain complications and consumer spending marred China’s smartphone sector as COVID-19 spread in 2020, but the sector has since bounced back along with a broader economy.

Analysts expect sales in China to largely recover in 2021, but expect US sanctions on Huawei Technologies Co Ltd to weigh on overall smartphone shipments.

Huawei’s shipments to China fell 44 percent year-on-year in the fourth quarter of last year, according to data from research firm Canalys.

Apple Inc has been the main beneficiary of Huawei’s shortages to date, with its sales in China surging upon the release of its latest iPhone 12 series.

READ MORE: Apple logs record quarterly smartphone shipments

Android rivals Xiaomi Corp have also seen sales increase, but analysts say they must ramp up output to offset a fall in the production of Huawei’s high-end models.