Apple cutting production of iPhone 5C due to low sales
Pitiful 5C sales may have led Apple to cut production by half
Reports have been popping up here and there that the iPhone 5C isn’t doing so hot. Now Apple may be cutting production in half, according to a report from Chinese tech blog CTech. Sources from one unnamed manufacturer indicate that while the facility had been producing 300,000 iPhone 5C units a day, Apple has cut the order to 150,000 per day.
That would be a pretty sudden and drastic cut if the report is accurate, but other signs hint at problems with 5C sales. Notably, mobile app analytics company Localytics revealed data last month that indicated iPhone 5S sales were outpacing 5C sales by more than three-to-one during its first weekend.
To be fair, early adopters—the types who line up to get the latest phone as soon as it’s available—are probably not the types to skimp on features in order to save a buck (or $100). But that said, the real issue here is that Apple didn’t really make much of an effort to establish the iPhone in the low-end market. A price cut of $100 off of an unsubsidized $800 phone is a very half-assed appeal to emerging markets.
Apple revealed that it sold nine million iPhone 5S and 5C units in their first weekend, but it didn’t break down numbers. The overall number was still significantly higher than most analysts were expecting.
But while customers are still looking at a wait time of two to three weeks to receive their new iPhone 5S, there are no lines for the iPhone 5C, which ships within 24 hours of the order.
When the company revealed the reduced-price iPhone 5C last month, the common assumption was that Apple would rely on this device to gain a foothold in emerging markets, like China, India, Brazil, and Russia. But then it announced the price: $99 for the 16GB version and $199 for the 32GB version on a two-year contract.
Consequently, Apple is missing a huge opportunity to tap the market of prepaid subscribers in China who will be upgrading to a smartphone in the next few years. And now that Apple has secured a license to run on China Mobile (China’s largest mobile carrier), it will have access to even more Chinese mobile users.
Some 80% of China Mobile’s 750 million customers are prepaid subscribers, and BTIG analyst Walter Piecyk estimates that 80% of China Mobile’s prepaid subscribers will be first-time smartphone buyers in the next 3-5 years, compared to 60% of China Mobile’s postpaid subscribers.
Piecyk posits that Apple is targeting a 60% market opportunity on 125 million postpaid customers at $550 to net a $40 billion return, but in doing so, it’s stepping over an 80% market opportunity on 625 million prepaid customers at a price point of $300 for a $150 billion return.
What all of this boils down to is the fact that the 5C was a pretty ho-hum answer to a looming challenge on Apple’s horizon, and now Apple may be realizing that the 5C was a big waste of time.
Apple shares closed Friday at $492.81, an increase of 5.37% over the last month.
image source: iphone6jailbreak.net