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Wednesday 05 June 2019 2:13 pm  |  Updated:  Wednesday 05 June 2019 2:15 pm

Samsung cuts output at its last Chinese smartphone factory

A man walks past the logo of Samsung Electronics at the company's showroom in Seoul on August 25, 2017. The heir to the Samsung business empire, including the world's biggest smartphone maker, awaited the verdict on August 25 in his corruption trial over the scandal that brought down president Park Geun-Hye. / AFP PHOTO / JUNG Yeon-Je (Photo credit should read JUNG YEON-JE/AFP/Getty Images)

Samsung will cut production at its last remaining smartphone factory in China, as its loses ground on domestic rivals.

Read more: Trump: US and UK will reach an agreement on Huawei

The reduction comes just six months after the South Korean firm announced the closure of its factory in Tianjin.

Another factory in Shenzhen closed in April.

Samsung has struggled against rising labour costs and stiffer competition from domestic rivals such as Huawei and Xiaomi, which offer competitive models at a cheaper price.

The Huizho factory, which had more than 6,000 workers, produced 63m smartphones in 2017 – 17 per cent of Samsung’s production that year, according to Caixin, a Chinese financial news site.

The world’s biggest smartphone maker has seen its share of the Chinese market shrink from about 20 per cent in 2013 to less than one per cent today, according to Strategy Analytics.

Paolo Pescatore, an analyst for PP Foresight, said: “The factory closure highlights the intense competitive landscape and the ongoing challenges of competing with Chinese rivals”.

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“It should not have a negative impact on [Samsung’s] global operations,” he added.

Samsung has been moving its smartphone production to Vietnam and India.

It has two factories in Vietnam that produce about half its global phone output. Last year, it opened the world’s largest mobile phone factory in India.

The global smartphone market is slowing down with worldwide shipments falling 4.1 per cent to 1.4bn units, according to IDC. Samsung’s shipments fell to 292m units – down eight per cent.

Read more: Chinese state hackers accused of ‘rigging’ 5G tests to protect Huawei

By comparison, Chinese firms Huawei and Xiaomi have seen their shipments surge by almost a third.

City PM has approached Samsung for comment.

Read more

Volkswagen’s China crunch deepens as Europe’s biggest carmaker weighs 100,000 job cuts

Volkswagen is suffering from high costs, fierce Asian competition and a prolonged bitter conflict with unions over plant closures.

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