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Apple Cook courts China in Year of the Snake

We are now living in the last days of the USA being the biggest power on Earth. Buried under a tremendous amount of debt and a continuing struggle to understand which direction to take in order to stimulate growth, American companies are now looking at the ‘East' for solutions. KitGuru analyses the data and considers if Apple is planting seeds in the right part of the Earth for future harvest.

Tim Cook, Apple CEO, has told China's Xinua News Agency that China will not be the second largest market for long. Apple fully expects that China will yield the single biggest chunk of its sales in no time at all.

To give you an idea of the scale of the opportunity, China Mobile is the world's biggest mobile phone company – and it DOESN'T offer Apple products at the moment. For Tim to court/win business with China Mobile is like McDonald's deciding to switch from Coke to Pepsi.

KitGuru has already reported on the move to make Apple iPhone products and accessories cheaper. Perfect preparation for entering an enormous market where salaries etc will, overall, be lower. That kind of product adjustment shows that Apple knows what it will take to hit China and hit it hard.

Remember, Apple is not only interested in pushing iPhone into China. It will also be very keen on the idea that hundreds of millions of new subscribers to the ‘Apps Culture' will start to spend small amounts every month on tiny, but cool, bits of software.

The Chinese government is working hard to stop prices jumping too high too quickly - something which could stall the economy more than European issues. If Foxconn-manufactured iPhones start being sold in China, how will that affect the economy?

So what can Apple do to ensure this smooth entry?

Well it will need to be able to put products in front of people. One of the biggest successes for Apple in the West is that its ‘store oriented' approach has flown in the face of dwindling economies where recession has forced Comet, Jessops, Woolworths etc into administration. KitGuru expects Apple to unveil plans for something like 100 new stores in key locations around China.

You need to be in bed with the largest reseller in the country – and Tim is doing that right now as he plays fiscal footsie with Yu Lei, President of China Mobile.

Also, Apple's products will need to be cheap in order to gain penetration. Which the new ‘Plastic iPhone' will be.

The one thing that Americans can be reassured by, is that their leader has been contemplating a future ‘post America' for quite some time – so, hopefully, the next round of stimulus/austerity in the USA will help create a better future in a world dominated in every physical way by China.

Our Yankee friends went nuts when this picture was originally published. In a world where no regime lasts forever, Americans were upset that their leader was contemplating the future that we're now starting to live in.

KitGuru says: Sounds like a 1-2-3 for Apple in China. If the deal with China Mobile, the production of cheaper iPhones and opening of ~100 stores all go ahead before the end of 2013, then Apple's stock price will shoot up even higher.

Comment below or in the KitGuru forums.

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One comment

  1. Here’s my $.02,

    Although this comment might be nit-picky or irrelevant, I think it is important to note the causes of U.S. based firms ‘looking to the East’. It is common knowledge that the United States does not operate in a vacuum apart from the rest of the world, and business owners would be foolish to think that; hence a globalization strategy. Additionally, I think they are trying to bring competition to Korean-based Samsung into China to make sure they can’t gain economic rents in that market.

    Regarding the statement that “We are now living in the last days of the USA being the biggest power on Earth”. I would like to humbly challenge the validity of that statement, as it requires immense economical forecasting to make such a claim.

    http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.MKTP.KD.ZG/countries/CN-US?display=graph
    http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GNP.MKTP.PP.CD/countries/CN-US?display=graph

    According to the worldbank data, I’m not sure I draw the same conclusions.

    Nevertheless, interesting article!