Title: Foxconn Tries to Move Past the iPhone
1Foxconn Tries to Move Past the iPhone
- Kun-Mao Chao (???)
- Department of Computer Science and Information
Engineering - National Taiwan University, Taiwan
- A note given in BCC class on May 8, 2013
2 Starting to develop its own
A wall of flat-screen televisions at Foxconns
headquarters in Taipei.
Source The New York Times 5/6/2013
3Foxconn Apple
- Terry Gou did almost everything that Apple could
ask for. He made all those iPhones and he made
them cheap. - When Apple was subsequently criticized for low
wages and poor working conditions at his
factories in China, it was Mr. Gous company, the
Foxconn Technology Group, and not Apple, that
caught the most heat.
Source The New York Times 5/6/2013
4Foxconn Apple
- Foxconn, which is based here but does most of its
manufacturing in mainland China, wants to reduce
its reliance on Apple. - Its new strategy is a shift away from making
products that other companies design, and toward
developing products of its own, with an
especially aggressive push into designing and
manufacturing large, flat-screen televisions.
Source The New York Times 5/6/2013
5Foxconn Apple
- Foxconn senses that the Apple aura isnt as
invincible as before, said Jamie Wang, an
analyst at the research firm Gartner. So they
are worried that they need something besides
Apples business that will allow them to grow. - Last month, Foxconn reported that first-quarter
revenue was dragged down 19.2 percent compared
with the same period last year because of
declining iPhone and iPad orders from its main
customer, Apple.
Source The New York Times 5/6/2013
6Contract Manufacture vs. Branded Production
- Foxconns predicament mirrors a common problem
faced by Taiwanese contract manufacturers, whose
fortunes depend heavily on those of their
clients. - A handful of manufacturers, like HTC and Asustek
Computer, have managed to shed their contract
manufacturing businesses altogether to develop
branded products. - But as they began competing with clients, those
clients began deserting them.
Source The New York Times 5/6/2013
7Sakai LCD factory
- Since last year, Foxconns investment choices
have reflected its new strategy. Mr. Gou
personally spent about 840 million on a 37.6
percent stake in Sharps LCD panel factory in
Sakai, Japan. - Sharp needed a quick cash infusion and Mr. Gous
purchase gave his company a quick way to control
a component that accounts for more than 50
percent of the production cost of a TV set.
Source The New York Times 5/6/2013
8Sakai LCD factory
- Most analysts say they believe Foxconn needs a
larger TV customer. Televisions represent less
than 5 percent of Foxconns business, far less
than its revenue from Apple. - Analysts say Mr. Gous efforts to buy an LCD
factory and vertically integrate his television
manufacturing represent anticipation that orders
for an Apple television product will come his
way.
Source The New York Times 5/6/2013
9The Dow Jones Industrial Average
10The Dow Jones Industrial Average
11Foxconn
12Foxconn