
In China, Apple Finds a Sweet Spot
SHANGHAI — A year afterwards opening a flagship store here, Apple has a problem that any retailer would envy: the huge 16,000-square-foot space is already too small.
The storeâs glass staircase
Huge crowds descend the store’s glass staircase, only to discover legions of as a rule young Chinese crowding around spare displays of Apple’s devices. Another Apple Store, four miles away, is as well packed.
To cope, Apple says it is now planning a third, even larger Shanghai store, as then as dozens of other stores throughout the country. The expansion is driven by clients like Wang Shangyan, a 17-year-old professed Apple maniac.
“I have many Apple products, like Touch, iPod, iPad 2 and MacBook,” Mr. Wang said afterwards browsing the Apple Store here this week. “I don’t have an iPhone nevertheless I’m waiting for the fifth generation. I will come to the Apple Store to buy it; it doesn’t matter how much it costs.”
Apple says its Chinese outlets — two in Beijing and two in Shanghai — are now the four most heavily trafficked Apple stores in the world. They as well generate the most revenue, outselling even the Fifth Avenue Apple Store in Manhattan, which is open around the clock.
Apple’s push into China may be important for other reasons: it shows the depth of this country’s fast-growing upper middle class.
Foreign brands can absorb another lesson as then. Apple’s success shows that with products that are not so easy to counterfeit, Chinese consumers are willing to pay a premium.
“It appears the middle class in China is growing faster than Apple’s presence,” said Charles Wolf, a securities analyst who follows Apple for Needham & Company.
“I mean China has taken rip-offs to a new level, pirating Apple Stores themselves. It speaks to the demand for Apple products throughout China.”
Apple declined to comment on the case. The company has no authorized store in Kunming, only licensed resellers, which are barred from creating look-alike outlets or even calling themselves an Apple Store.
Scarcity does seem to be feeding the frenzy. Shortages, bottlenecks and delays have created a thriving gray market in Apple products in China, with many consumers paying hefty prices for iPhones or iPads that have been smuggled in from overseas, ahead of the Chinese release date. Apple said recently its bottlenecks had eased.
Last week, Apple reported blockbuster sales and profits in its third quarter, including $3.8 billion in revenue in greater China, which includes Taiwan and Hong Kong.
The first three quarters of Appleâs fiscal year
For the first three quarters of Apple’s fiscal year, revenue in greater China was $8.8 billion — six times that of a year before. Last quarter, Apple may have even generated more revenue in China than Lenovo — the Chinese PC maker that seven years ago acquired I.B.M.’s personal computer business, according to a survey by Bloomberg News.
China has become the second-largest market afterwards the United States for apps that run on the smartphone and tablet, according to Distimo, a Dutch company that tracks the popularity of apps. Strong sales of the iPhone and iPad are as well helping drive up sales of Apple’s other major products, including desktop computers and laptops.
Apple mania has even inspired grass-roots inventors. A year ago, a 22-year-old programmer and his 25-year-old brother introduced what they called the Apple Peel, in substance a case they said helped turn an iPod into a smartphone capable of making calls.
This has all helped make Apple seem even cooler. Introductions of new Apple products, although, can be dangerous. Last May, a huge crowd that lined up to get the white model of the iPhone 4 turned unruly and shattered a door at one of Apple’s stores in Beijing.
Analysts say Apple has found a sweet spot. The company is operating in the relatively open retail market, where restrictions have been eased. And Apple products do not compete head-to-head with those made by state companies. To illustrate, there are no major state-owned mobile phone makers.
In fact, Apple has been eager to team up with state-run telecom companies, which control the all-important mobile phone subscriptions. Apple sells its iPhone with service provided by China Unicom, and analysts say the company is now in talks with the country’s other big telecom operators, China Telecom and China Mobile.
What could go wrong for Apple?
What could go wrong for Apple? One of the biggest risks, analysts say, is that Apple moves into social networking or cloud computing, both of which pose a challenge to the Communist Party censors.
The government has blocked Facebook and Twitter and is putting the squeeze on Google, Gmail and the company’s new social networking tool, Google Plus, which is already blocked.
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In China Apple Finds Markets Sweet Spot
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