Huawei seeks to steal spotlight from Apple with launch of US$2,800 tri-fold smartphone
The Chinese tech giant showed off its new Mate XT, which users can fold three ways like an accordion screen door, during a launch ceremony in the southern tech hub of Shenzhen.
China's Huawei Technologies on Tuesday (Sep 10) unveiled a US$2,800 (S$3,660) tri-foldable phone as it seeks to expand its lead in the world's biggest smartphone market and steal the spotlight from Apple hours after it debuted a new iPhone.
The Chinese tech giant showed off its new Mate XT, which users can fold three ways like an accordion screen door, during a launch ceremony in the southern tech hub of Shenzhen.
The device has already received more than 3.6 million pre-orders, for which no deposit is required, according to the company's website. The entire global market for foldable phones was around 4 million units in the second quarter, according to research firm IDC.
"Today we bring you a product that everyone can think of but could not make. Our team has been working hard for five years and has never given up," Huawei executive director Richard Yu said at the launch.
"We dare to make extraordinary breakthroughs. Today we will once again rewrite the history of the industry, turn science fiction into reality, and lead a new era of folding devices."
The much-anticipated launch comes just hours after Apple unveiled its latest model – the AI-boosted iPhone 16 – with both smartphones due to go on sale on Sep 20.
The Mate XT comes in red and black and has a 10.2-inch display screen. At 3.6mm wide, the company said it was the world's slimmest foldable phone and has a keyboard attachment that fits in your pocket.
Prices start at 19,999 yuan (US$2,800) for 256 gigabytes, with versions with higher memory available for 21,999 yuan and 23,999 yuan.
APPLE'S AI CHALLENGE
The launch, which follows a series of successful smartphone debuts, underscores Huawei's ability to navigate US sanctions and solidifies its position against Apple in China, where some consumers criticised the new iPhone 16 for its lack of AI features in the country.
Apple has yet to announce an AI partner in China to power the 16s and Apple Intelligence, the company's AI software, will only be available in Chinese languages next year.
"What's the point of buying it if you can't use AI?" wrote one user on Weibo, China's X-like platform. Another commented: "Without AI as the biggest selling point, it should be half price."
While Apple for years enjoyed strong demand in China, where new iPhone launches once sparked a frenzy, its sales have dwindled and the company's ranking in the world's second-largest economy has now dropped from third to sixth place.
Huawei made a comeback to the high-end smartphone segment last year with the release of a device powered by a domestically-made chip, defying US sanctions that have cut off its access to the global chipset supply chain. The launch of the Mate 60 Pro surprised analysts and US officials.
Huawei already has two-way foldable phones in its lineup, and their strong sales in China helped it overtake Samsung Electronics this year as the biggest vendor of such phones globally.
But with a price tag that starts at US$2,808 – more than twice the starting price of the comparable iPhone 16 Pro Max – and limited production, the tri-fold phone is likely to become more of a symbol of Huawei's tech prowess than a major sales driver, analysts said.
The foldable smartphone market grew 57 per cent year-on-year in the second quarter with 3.9 million units shipped, largely as Chinese smartphone makers pushed into overseas markets, according to consultancy IDC.
That still remains just 1.3 per cent of the wider smartphone market, with 292.2 million smartphones shipped in the second quarter, IDC said.
Huawei ranked as the world's biggest foldable smartphone seller in the second quarter with a 27.5 per cent market share, ahead of South Korea's Samsung, with 16.4 per cent, according to IDC.
That share rises to 42 per cent in China's home market, ahead of Vivo and former Huawei unit Honor, which it spun off under pressure from U.S. sanctions in 2020.
In the broader smartphone market in China, Apple's ranking fell from third to sixth place in the second quarter, as Huawei emerged as the third-largest vendor on the back of strong sales of its latest smartphones.