The post Apple Vision Pro: A Trillion-dollar Insurance Policy appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>In our analysis of the Apple Vision Pro, we highlight that it is the most complex consumer electronics product ever made. And it is already causing a shift in approach by its rivals.
Nevertheless, we still believe that Apple is using the Vision Pro essentially as an insurance policy. The majority of Apple’s revenue and profit is derived from the iPhone product line, and related products and accessories – Watch, for example, would not exist without iPhone.
Therefore, iPhone is the core of Apple’s almost $2.75-trillion market cap (at the time of writing). Apple is bound to do anything in its power to defend the iPhone’s market position.
For a long time, people have speculated that the product most likely to replace the smartphone as their primary interface with digital life will be some sort of augmented reality device. So far, the eXtended Reality (XR) market has been disappointing – generating a few 10s of millions of unit sales but not a huge amount of consistent usage, apart from some niche enterprise use cases. Furthermore, the technical challenge of making true augmented reality glasses has proven to be beyond the capabilities of even the most technically gifted companies.
Apple is therefore not immediately threatened by the slowly developing XR industry. But would it be wise for it to sit on the sidelines and watch while potential competitors work on what might, one day, be a product that can truly compete with its iPhone revenue stream? Of course not, and it hasn’t.
For Apple, the worst possible outcome would be if the XR segment took off strongly and it did not have a product in the game. Even if Apple spends a few billion dollars developing its XR products and the market still doesn’t take off, it would be costly but scarcely make a dent in its ample cash reserves.
So, Apple has made the logical choice and invested in creating the Apple Vision Pro. Along the way, it has amassed an impressively large patent portfolio that it can use to defend its position.
If, ultimately, the XR market does take off, Apple will be in a prime position to exploit the opportunity. However, if it continues to behave as an interesting niche market, then Apple has cemented its place by having a product that will be used to measure all others.
Subscribing clients can read our full analysis of the Apple Vision Pro that also includes sales projection scenarios.
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]]>The post How Far Has Technology Come in 20 Years? appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>Twenty years ago, I was an equity analyst for a Wall Street investment bank. At the time, my research director liked to get all the analysts to write occasional thought pieces. In the following article written in June 2003, I chose to write a speculative piece that looked back to 2003 from five years in the future, i.e. 2008. I speculated that there would be quite a few technological leaps in the five intervening years.
Given the 20 years that have now passed since I wrote the article, how many of those technologies have actually come into being? As you will see, not many, while others that were not foreseen have matured – for example, app-based smartphones and music streaming.
Without specifically naming it as artificial intelligence, I foresaw a role for cloud-based intelligent software agents that would provide intuitive assistance in multiple situations – a true digital assistant. These have not come into being and they are not even much discussed. We do have digital assistants such as Apple’s Siri, Google Assistant or Amazon’s Alexa, but they are mostly incapable of anything more than answering simple questions and certainly couldn’t be trusted to book travel tickets, make restaurant reservations or update other people’s diaries. While ChatGPT and derivatives of Large Language Models seem superficially smarter, they are still not yet at the stage of being able to function as a general assistant.
One other technology referenced in the article that is still far from maturity, is augmented reality. The glasses described were not too far-fetched – Microsoft’s HoloLens can achieve some of what is described and Epson and Vuzix, for example, have developed glasses that are in use by field service engineers. But these products are not able to reference real-world objects. Apple’s forthcoming Vision Pro, while technically brilliant, would not be a suitable solution for the use case described.
At the end of the article, I listed companies that I expected to be playing a significant role in the development of the various technologies highlighted. But where are those companies now?
For context, and for the younger readers, around the turn of this century, third-generation cellular licenses had been expensively auctioned in several countries and many mobile operators were struggling to generate a return on their investment. Oh, how things have changed (or not)! As an analyst covering mobile technology, I could see that investors were valuing mobile operators solely on their voice and text revenues, with zero value being ascribed to future data revenues. My article was also an attempt to awaken investors to the potential value beyond voice.
Anyway, here’s the report that I wrote in mid-2003. It was written as though it were an article in a business newspaper.
It is just eight years since European wireless telecom companies became the subject of outright derision for spending billions of dollars on licenses to operate third-generation cellular networks. Now the self-same companies have become core to our everyday existence. Their stock, which bottomed in the middle of 2002, has risen steadily ever since.
The original promise of 3G technology was high-speed data networking coupled with an exceptional capacity for both voice and data. But critics said that it was an innovation users didn’t need, want or would be willing to pay for.
When the first commercial 3G networks appeared in 2003 and faltered at the first step, the doubters started to look dangerously like they had a point. But the universe is fickle and within the last two or three years, the combination of maturing networks and the inevitable power of Moore’s Law has started to deliver wireless devices and applications that would have been thought of, if not as science fiction, then at least science-stretching-the-bounds-of-credibility, when the licenses were issued.
However, while the long-time infamy of 3G means it is taking the starring role as industry watchers chart the chequered history of the technology, it is the supporting cast of technologies that has really delivered the goods. Without them, 3G would have remained just another method to access the backbone network.
The following snapshots from one perfectly ordinary day last month show how the coordinated application of a whole slew of technologies has subtly but distinctly altered our lives.
Bristol – May 1, 2008, 12:57 pm
Beads of sweat form on the face of Jim McKenna, a 24-year-old technician, as he studies the guts of a damaged generator. McKenna is a member of a rapid response team, looking after mission-critical power generation facilities across Southern England.
“Dave, I’ve located the damaged circuits, I think I can repair it, but the control unit is non-standard and I’ve not seen one like it before. Can you help me out here?”
McKenna’s voice is picked up by a tiny transducer microphone embedded in a Bluetooth-enabled hands-free earbud. The bud is so small it nestles unobtrusively in the technician’s ear. The earbud is wirelessly connected to the small transceiver on McKenna’s belt. His voice activates a ‘push’-to-talk connection to his controller in the Scottish technical support center. The word push is in quotes because it is his voice that effects the push, leaving McKenna’s hands entirely free.
In the Edinburgh-based command center, David Sanderson, an experienced engineer, maximizes the image from one of a half-dozen sub-screens that compete for his attention. Each screen shows live pictures from his team of technicians with data about their location and degree of job completion.
Sanderson taps the screen again and, 400 miles away in Bristol, a tiny camera on McKenna’s smart glasses zooms in on the generator specification plate. Sanderson peers intently at the screen:
“I see a code on the side panel. I’ve highlighted it for you. Can you scan it? I can then pull the circuit files for you”.
Seemingly in mid-air, a red circle appears around a barcode away to McKenna’s right. The heads-up display in McKenna’s glasses maintains a fix on the code even though he moves his head. He leans across and uses the camera to scan the code, which is instantaneously transmitted back to Edinburgh where the circuit plans are uploaded from the database. Sanderson extracts the relevant section before speaking again to McKenna.
“Jim, I’m initiating the synchronization, you should have it in a few seconds.”
The 3G transceiver on Jim’s belt receives the information and immediately routes it to his smart glasses via Bluetooth. As Jim looks at the damaged circuitry, the heads-up display begins to superimpose the circuit diagram over the actual circuits, adjusting for size. He spends a few minutes comparing the damaged circuits with the schematic images. He calls for more backup.
“Dave, the problem is definitely in this sector of the step-down circuit,” McKenna points to a series of circuit boards, “is there a suggested workaround in the troubleshooting file?”
Within minutes the heads-up display starts guiding McKenna through a series of measures that isolates and bypasses the damaged circuits. Within 20 minutes, McKenna successfully reboots the system – power is restored.
Five years ago, very little of the above could have been done as efficiently and intuitively. Field service engineers needed substantial experience to tackle complex tasks – they also had to carry heavy, often ruggedized PCs and a whole series of manuals on CD-ROMs. Technical backup, where available, was a cellular voice call.
Liverpool Street, London, May 1, 2008, 2:32 pm
Joanne King, an equity analyst, is meeting a buy-side client. As they settle into the soft leather chairs of the meeting room, she slides a flexible plastic sheet across the table. The sheet is printed with electronic ink. The latest marketing pack was downloaded to her mobile terminal on the way over in the taxi. She taps the screen of her smartphone and the slide set appears on the sheet. As Joanne and her client discuss the vagaries of the stock market, they are able to use virtual tabs to flip between ‘pages’ within the pack. When the client requests more information on the balance sheet of one of companies they’re discussing, Joanne is able to pull down the necessary information, adding it to the slide set.
Partway through the discussion, Joanne hears a subtle tone in her ear indicating an urgent communication request from her personal digital assistant. She apologizes to the client before initiating the communication path. “Wildfire, what’s the problem?” she knows that Wildfire will only override her no-interrupt rule if an issue requires immediate attention.
“An air traffic control strike in Paris has disrupted all flights. Your 6 pm Brussels flight is showing a two-hour delay and may be canceled. The best alternative is to take the Eurostar train. Services leave at 16:30 and 18:30.”
After a moment’s thought, Joanne comes to a decision: “Book the 16:30, please.” Conscious of the topics still to cover in her meeting, she adds, “Can you also have a taxi waiting when I am through here?”
Wildfire confirms the instructions and drops back into meeting mode. Joanne apologizes to the client and resumes her meeting. Meanwhile, Joanne’s software agent communicates with various travel services, canceling her flight reservation and booking the rail service.
Having learned from Joanne’s prior behavior, the agent books a First Class seat in a carriage toward the front of the train. The agent also communicates with a taxi firm – a car will be waiting when her meeting is completed. The agent is authorized to spend money within predefined limits. Simultaneously, the agent modifies Joanne’s expense report and calendar.
Joanne’s dinner date with friends in Brussels will be hard to keep given the change in travel plans. The agent negotiates with the diaries of her three dinner guests and the reservation computer at their chosen restaurant. A new reservation is agreed and four diaries are updated accordingly.
At the conclusion of her meeting, Joanne leaves the slide set contained in the pre-punched flexible display. Her client will be able to store it in standard folders and refer to it at leisure. Solar cells ensure that there is enough power to display the material without having to worry about battery charge.
As she heads for the taxi, Joanne’s location-aware PDA recognizes she is in motion and, therefore, ready to communicate. “Joanne, you have 2 voice messages, 23 business e-mails and 12 personal e-mails. How would you like me to handle them?” Joanne chooses to listen and respond to a voicemail on the short taxi ride to Waterloo, deferring the e-mails for the train.
Once in her seat on the Eurostar train, Joanne unfolds a screen and keyboard that work alongside her 3G smartphone. Bluetooth provides the link between the smartphone, screen and keyboard. The Light Emitting Polymer screen is extremely lightweight and flexible, yet delivers high contrast and color resolution. Power consumption is low.
Joanne spends an hour responding to the e-mails before kicking off her shoes and taking out an e-book to settle down to listen to some music. She is particularly looking forward to a new album she bought on the way to the station. A song she was unfamiliar with came over the radio in the taxi – loving it, but not knowing what it was, Joanne recorded a quick burst. Vodafone, her service provider, was able to identify the music and offered to sell her the single or album. In anticipation of her long train ride, she chose the album. Leaning back in her seat, she lets the cool beats ease her to Brussels.
In 2003, one-on-one presentations were either made from a PC screen or delivered on regular paper. Meeting interruptions were either obtrusive or impossible, and changing travel reservations on the fly typically required several people – often with intervention by the traveler herself. Meanwhile, mobile e-mail was possible but only on large-screen PCs, compromised by size, weight and power consumption, or devices with screens and keyboards too small for anything other than limited responses.
Hyde Park – May 1, 2:18 pm
Mike Lee is on his way home from high school. He flips his skateboard down three steps and dives for cover in the bushes, the sound of gunfire ringing in his ears. Peering through the leaves, he holds a small flat panel console in front of him. He scans through 120 degrees, concentrating on the screen. The intense rhythms of electro-house are now the loudest sounds he hears, but there is also the distant rap of gunfire. On the screen, he sees the surrounding park, but in addition, the occasional outlandish figure appears, flitting between hiding places among the trees. “Josh! Where are you?” Mike demands in an urgent whisper.
“I’m by the lake dude. Surrounded. Can you get down here? I’m running out of ammo.”
Mike swings around, looking toward the lake through his device. He sees Josh’s position highlighted on the screen. He turns back, takes a deep breath and starts jabbing buttons on his device. Explosions and smoke fill the screen. Then running to the path, he jumps back on his skateboard and carves down the hill to the lake, pitching into the shrubbery next to his buddy Josh. They proceed to engage the advancing enemy in a frenzy of laser grenades, gunfire and whoops of delight.
After a few minutes, they both hear the words they have been waiting for, “Well done men, you have completed Level 12. Hit the download button to move on to the next level.”
Mobile gaming, even as recently as 2003, offered a relatively poor user experience. Simple Java games were the norm. Games now not only involve online buddies but they are also immersed into the surrounding environment, massively enhancing the experience.
3G has come a long way from its ignominious start. However, the real catalyst that has made it a life-changing technology has been the incredible range of diverse technologies that have emerged to support the growth in wireless voice and data applications.
Cast List:
3G smartphones – Nokia, Motorola
Bluetooth earbuds – Sound ID
Heads-up display – Microvision
Voice-driven push-to-talk – Sonim
Voice control – Advanced Recognition Technologies
Personal digital assistant – Wildfire
Electronic ink pad – E Ink, Philips Electronics
Music capture – Shazam Entertainment
Foldable Light Emitting Polymer Display – Technology from Cambridge Display Technology
Augmented reality game console – Nokia N-Gage 4
Intelligent mobile agents – Hewlett Packard
Geo-location technology – Openwave
Where are these companies in 2023?
My original cast of technology characters has seen mixed fortunes, some are still around but with different owners while others have disappeared altogether. Few are still going in their original business niche:
Nokia and Motorola are brands that are still making mobile devices, but in different guises than in 2003.
I don’t know what became of Sound ID. There is an app called SoundID created by Sonar Works, but it is different and unrelated to the Sound ID identified in the article. But Bluetooth True Wireless earbuds are now a huge market.
Microvision is still in business but has shifted its focus to LiDAR in the automotive space.
Sonim is still in business and still making ruggedized devices, including push-to-talk devices for the safety and security sectors.
Advanced Recognition Technologies was acquired by Scansoft in 2005.
Wildfire was an innovative voice-controlled personal assistant that was acquired by the operator Orange in 2000. But Orange killed the service in 2005.
E-Ink still exists, although Philips parted ways with it in 2005.
Shazam still exists but was acquired by Apple in 2018. When it started in 2002, you had to dial a short number and hold your phone to the sound source. Users would then receive an SMS with the song title and artist.
Cambridge Display Technology is still around. It was floated on Nasdaq in 2004 and acquired by Sumitomo Chemical in 2007.
Hewlett Packard is clearly still around. However, it doesn’t make intelligent software agents. But then again, neither does anyone else, at least not in the way portrayed in the article.
Openwave no longer exists, although many of its businesses have been absorbed into other entities.
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]]>The post Garmin Epix Gen 2 Smartwatch Review: Pretty, Costly appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>The subject of this review is the Garmin Epix Gen 2 smartwatch. This is not going to be an exhaustive analysis of everything that this watch can do – and it’s a lot – but I will aim to pick out some of the highlights in the way that I use it and what we can learn in more general terms about this particular part of the smartwatch market. As I say, the Epix 2 can do a lot of things and so it should; this is by any measure an expensive watch. So who is the target buyer for the Epix and why would someone buy this watch and what can we infer about the wider smartwatch market?
The Epix feels like a new branch in the Garmin family tree. But as the Gen 2 part of the name implies, it’s actually a re-launch of the Epix range which originally came out in 2015 featuring – back then – a color display and touch control for navigating maps. But Garmin felt that the technology wasn’t ready for prime time in 2015, so back-burnered the model for a few years.
Garmin is clearly happy that display technology has caught up with its vision now, so the Epix Gen 2 features a vibrant, always-on OLED touch display that really makes graphics pop in a way that even the best of its transflective Memory In Pixel (MIP) LCD displays on, for example, the Fenix and top-end Forerunner watches, can’t match.
Garmin has been extending its product ranges over the last few years; it sometimes feels like it is creating ever more tightly overlapping circles in a huge Venn diagram. Epix is aimed at dedicated sports enthusiasts – let’s call them athletes. Garmin has two strongly established ranges for athletes. The Forerunner series – that starts from relatively entry-level products through to the Forerunner 955 that retails for around $500 – and the Fenix range, which is targeted at multisport athletes and has a premium ruggedized aesthetic. The Fenix range starts at $700. Epix 2 is essentially a 47mm Fenix 7, but with an OLED display, a somewhat more refined design aesthetic and positioned with more lifestyle messaging. And it is priced at the premium end of the Fenix range, starting at $900.
I chose the Epix in white with the titanium bezel. I did this mostly because the black, that I would otherwise likely have opted for, was not available at the time. However, I have grown to like the white and the colorway works well with the titanium bezel. The 1.3” 416 x 416 pixel display’s cover glass is sapphire, which promises good scratch resistance. I have nevertheless managed to scratch mine already by clattering the metal part of a swimming pool lane marker while doing backstroke – but it’s barely noticeable and it didn’t break!
All its top end watches include detailed topographical maps that can be used for navigating. As the watch was purchased in Europe, it came pre-loaded with 11.5GB of active topo maps that allow me to navigate anywhere in Europe. For example on a recent trip to France, I was able to navigate around the unfamiliar lanes and trails of an obscure part of the Languedoc region with ease. If I travel to another part of the world – the USA for example – I can download maps for free – although they are hefty file sizes and the download process can be long as a result. The titanium Epix models are equipped with 32GB of storage, while the slightly cheaper stainless steel model makes do with 16GB.
The display is attractive. Graphics look great, and the included topographical maps are easy to read. However watch faces are functional but not amazing. Users used to the variety and beauty of, say, Apple Watch faces are likely to be underwhelmed. I am not bothered though – I can tune the face to display what I want it to and if I want to go deeper into any of the displayed data, I just need to tap and hold to access the underlying function.
So, it’s a nice looking watch, but worthy of the $900 price tag? That’s a matter for individual purchasers, but it’s a hefty premium for an OLED display, which is the most obvious point of differentiation over similarly capable watches in the Fenix and Forerunner ranges. And it’s also a $100 premium over the newly launched Apple Watch Ultra.
Garmin has founded its brand strength on tracking athletic performance. Unlike most other smartwatches, including Apple Watch, it has eschewed following the conventional approach of a touchscreen supported by one or two hardware buttons. Garmin watches are mostly non-touchscreen and have five physical buttons. The Epix has slightly changed the game by including an always-on OLED touchscreen. But it still has the five physical button layout familiar to users of other Garmin watches such as the Forerunner and Fenix series.
Garmin’s user interface presents a steep learning curve when first encountered. But once known, it becomes relatively intuitive. In the case of the Epix, the touchscreen allows for an additional and welcome level of control. But when a training session starts, the touchscreen becomes inactive and the watch is controlled solely by the hardware buttons. This is absolutely the way it should be and I would argue that any watch that relies on a touch interface to manage workouts is not aimed at serious fitness enthusiasts. A control interaction that seems simple when sat at a desk, becomes difficult in the depths of running reps when sweat is dripping from shaking fingers, or doing laps in the pool; hardware buttons are the only interface that makes sense in this context, so Garmin turns-off the touch interface during activities by default. But the user can change this in settings, along with more or less everything else.
And this is another benefit of Garmin compared to most other ‘standard’ smartwatches. It offers almost limitless customisation potential. A user can prioritise those sports they engage in most, change the layout of data screens to show only the data they want to see. And they can even change the functions assigned to the various buttons. This likely means that no two Garmin devices are exactly alike once the user has had time to personalize their device to their own preferences. The value of this capability only becomes fully apparent once you try another watch that doesn’t offer this level of personalization.
And while personalization can be managed on the device, it can be a bit fiddly. So Garmin has made it possible to make the changes in the Garmin Connect app, and then synchronize them to the watch. This is a good and long overdue innovation.
Garmin watches last a long time. The 47mm Fenix 7 will do 18 days between charges. The Epix manages only six days with the display in always-on mode. Switching to a mode where the screen lights up when you lift your wrist – which works amazingly well (no false negatives) – extends the battery life considerably, up to 16 days. With always-on display, full multiband satellite navigation, full-time heart-rate monitoring it will last up to 15 hours. In my experience, this seems about right. I did an ultra-marathon event in the mountains of Wales, with the display on full time, heart rate monitoring, location tracking and navigation. The event took me 12 hours to complete and I still had 35% battery capacity at the end. In endurance mode, when the GPS is used intermittently, and the display is not on full time, battery life can be extended to many days. Nevertheless, if you really want to maximize battery life, Garmin’s Enduro watch offers up to 77 days in ‘expedition’ mode.
Overall, I find the battery life tolerable. I do on average around an hour of activity per day and up to three hours per day on the weekend. I have the watch set so the display is always on. I have to recharge the watch once every four or five days or so. Recharging is relatively quick – although I haven’t timed how long it takes. For someone used to something like an Apple Watch, recharging once or twice a week might feel revolutionary, but for someone coming off of using one of Garmin’s other watches where you might only charge once in two weeks, it feels like a backward step.
Optimal health is founded on three pillars: good sleep, good exercise and good nutrition. Tracking all three, accurately, is the holy grail for health and wellness applications. None that I have found can do them all well. Most wearables attempt to track the first two, sleep and exercise, but even with these it’s not straightforward.
Garmin has a strong track record in helping users to manage the exercise pillar. It was a long time licensee of First Beat, and then went on to acquire the company outright in 2020. First Beat provides the algorithms that power Garmin’s analysis of not only a person’s exercise and other physical activities, but also how rest and recuperation play a role in building fitness. Fitness improves through stressing the body through exercise and then allowing it to rebuild itself, which it does to a marginally stronger level than before. But the body can only do this through resting. This means that rest is as an important component in building fitness as any workout.
The Epix’s multiple sensors track activities as well as the body’s levels of, for example, fatigue. These are summarized in multiple ways, but the easiest to grasp, at a glance is the Body Battery that shows the level of overall resource depletion and then recovery. Another valuable indicator is Garmin’s Training Readiness index which takes into account sleep and sleep history, recovery time since the last workout, heart-rate variability – which is a key marker of fatigue – training load and stress levels. All are good markers to track. And I have noticed that when I am feeling fatigued or achy following a period of strenuous activities, and I then check, the Training Readiness index shows levels consistent with how I feel. This is good for determining whether to do a planned workout, to shift to something lighter, or skip the workout altogether.
These metrics can be looked at on the device itself, but a richer and more interactive experience can be garnered from the Garmin Connect application that enables a wide range of analyses. It also links to partner apps such as Strava and Training Peaks with which it shares data seamlessly. And the app can also be used to source additional workout and training programs, and more.
The ecosystem benefits also come through in the integration with, for example, Training Peaks. I have a coach to help me with running. She shares my running programme with me on Training Peaks. This automatically syncs with the Epix, so when I select a ‘Run’ on the watch it shows the planned workout for the day and off I go. If I am wearing headphones to listen to music from the watch or through a paired smartphone, I get voice prompts that tell me times and paces for each section of the workout. This is excellent and means I just have to lace-up my shoes and head-out.
After a workout, the watch gives an indication of how much rest is needed. This takes account of the workout intensity as well as environmental factors such as a heat, altitude and how well rested I was before the exercise session. If I take things particularly easy in the hours following a workout, the watch sometimes says that due to my good rest, I am recovering faster and can therefore train again sooner.
Sleep tracking is complex. To do it accurately requires the placing of electrodes on the scalp to carefully monitor brain activity that changes dramatically in different phases of the sleep cycle. A wrist-worn wearable can only approximate what is going on by monitoring heart rate, respiration, movement etc. Garmin wearables do a decent job of this and I can certainly see a correlation between my sense of whether I slept well and what Garmin reports. But it’s not fool proof. A few nights ago I found myself wide-awake in the middle of the night. I didn’t move, but lay quietly until sleep returned – but I was awake for five or ten minutes or so. In the morning the watch didn’t report any wakefulness, presumably because I remained absolutely still. So, as with all wearable devices it provides an approximation of sleep quality, but the Garmin Epix is likely as good as any and better than many.
And to track sleep, the watch needs to be on your wrist, so any watch that needs daily recharging is likely to be useless for sleep tracking as most people will opt to recharge overnight, although, I tend to recharge when sat at my desk during the day so the watch is ready to monitor my sleep.
While sleep is likely the most important health pillar – actually more like a foundation on which everything else is based – nutrition also has a crucial role in determining health outcomes. However, Garmin’s smart watches are not equipped to track nutrition. The watch will estimate the calories expended during an activity and Garmin offers connected weight scales (Garmin Index) to track body weight and body composition. But for actually tracking calorie intake, Garmin has partnered with MyFitnessPal to exchange workout and nutrition information. MyFitnessPal has a great database and a well-designed app, but it’s tedious and time-consuming to log everything one consumes in a day, especially if making everything from scratch, so I rarely do it. But equally, most people are creatures of habit, so once you establish your own personal database of foods, checking the boxes next to each item can be relatively quick.
The Epix delivers notifications from a partner smartphone and includes the ability to respond, albeit with canned messages and then only with Android devices; iOS doesn’t support this capability. The Epix (along with most higher-end Garmin watches) can store music playlists from Spotify and a few other music applications that can be listened to through Bluetooth headphones. It doesn’t support Audible, which is a shame, because I listen to books on longer runs, but I can download podcasts.
Garmin does have an app store of sorts, however few of the apps are particularly inspiring; most only offer variations on watch faces. There are a few professional apps, such as Spotify, Komoot, Amazon Music, Deezer etc, but these are limited in extent. However, the standard core functions are sufficiently complete that I don’t feel like I am missing anything significant.
Garmin Pay is incorporated in the watch, but few banks where I live in the UK support Garmin Pay, so it’s essentially useless.
Apple is coming after Garmin’s market with its Watch Ultra – a do-it-all watch that counters Garmin’s fine-grained and often confusing application-specific offerings. I will be testing Apple’s newly launched contender in the next few weeks and will share my thoughts in due course. For now, I am happily making good use of the Epix to manage my training and recovery. It’s a definite step up from my previous Garmin Forerunner 935. But considering the latest Forerunner, the 955, does more or less everything the Epix can do, but for several hundred fewer dollars, and the Fenix 7 is almost identical, but just lacks the OLED display, and is again quite a bit cheaper – the question of value for money is a difficult one to get over. Were I choosing again, I would think twice about opting for the Epix, but it’s a near-run thing.
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]]>The post Fighting Climate Change: Tech Tonic for Tectonic Shift appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>The report is timely – coming shortly before the COP26 summit in Glasgow, UK, which is due to take place in November. COP26 is the point at which government representatives will come together to thrash out the wording of agreements that have been in discussion for many months.
The last 18 months, during which the world has battled COVID-19, have highlighted that much of what we previously took for granted, such as office working and long commutes, face-to-face meetings, frequent international travel and large trade shows, can be largely dispensed with thanks to the power of technology. While some of us may miss travelling across eight time zones to visit clients, colleagues and partners, COVID-19 has shown us that these things are not strictly necessary. And while some of the changes in working style may revert to pre-pandemic ways in the months to come, it is likely that more people than ever will work from home at least some of the time; hybrid working will become the norm for many (assuming their roles allow them to).
But the positive impacts on sustainability through COVID-enforced changes in working practices are a by-product of the pandemic. So, what more can the tech sector deliver if it specifically targets fighting climate change?
The answer is a lot. But it needs a long-term, concerted effort by companies of all types, to take responsibility in ways, both large and small, to tackling humanity’s greatest existential threat. Let us consider a few of the ways:
And humanity is likely to need every marginal gain available to achieve even the minimum targets to avert the worst impacts of the climate crisis.
We will always be happy to talk to our clients and other companies about ways they can mitigate their impact on the earth’s resources.
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]]>The post Weekly Update: Global Coronavirus Impact and Implications appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>Click here for the latest weekly updates on the impact and implication of COVID-19 situation on the Automotive industry.
As we write this last instalment of our weekly coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic (we will continue to cover it elsewhere, particularly its impact on the tech industry), we are reminded of the situation same time last year. The virus was rapidly spreading in different parts of the world. India had overtaken Russia to become the country with the world’s third-highest number of COVID-19 cases, with the US and Brazil taking the first and second spots, respectively. US top infectious diseases expert Anthony Fauci was warning his country that it was still “knee-deep” in its first wave of infections and the number of cases was yet to reach a satisfactory baseline. The weakness in the global economy due to the pandemic was being expected to reflect in the Q2 numbers even as the companies catering to the work-from-home (WFH) economy were looking at a windfall.
Coming back to today, the situation has hardly improved. The original virus may have moved out of focus, but it has left behind more virulent variants. Now, the most dangerous Delta variant is present in about 100 countries, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). After ravaging India, this variant is now resulting in fresh waves in countries like Indonesia, UK, Russia, Iran, Colombia and South Africa. USA, India and Brazil continue to top the world in the total number of cases, though most daily new cases are now coming from Brazil, India and Indonesia. Fauci is now imploring Americans to get vaccinated to avoid another wave, triggered by the Delta variant this time. While the global economy as a whole has recovered, the recovery has been patchy, with the developing nations staring at weak annual numbers. Meanwhile, the companies catering to the WFH economy continue to report robust numbers.
What has changed is the availability of vaccines. But even here the developed world has benefited the most, thanks to the resources at its command. A big part of the world won’t get access to any vaccine till late 2022 or early 2023. The pandemic has exposed the weaknesses in supply chains, not just for vaccines but also for sectors as diverse as semiconductors and chemicals. Already, many countries have started taking measures to mitigate the risks on this front. The focus is on a reduction in dependence on other countries for critical supplies.
The pandemic has changed many things permanently and for the better. The issue of climate change is now taken more seriously. The lockdowns showed that nature can quickly heal itself under the right conditions. International cooperation is another beneficiary. The pandemic has taught the world that international problems require international cooperation.
Israel is the most vaccinated major country currently, with over 55% of its 9.3 million population having received both doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. In May, the eligibility to get vaccinated was extended to the 12-15 age group. But the response from this age group has been lukewarm, a big cause for worry as the most virulent Delta variant of COVID-19 marks its entry into the country. On Thursday, the country’s health ministry reported 307 daily new cases on Wednesday, the highest since April. The ministry reportedly expects this number to jump in the coming days. However, the death rate is firmly in check, perhaps due to the high vaccination rate. According to the ministry, only one person died during the past two weeks.
Confident that the worst was over, Israel had relaxed most of the COVID-related curbs over the last few months. But the Delta variant has now forced the authorities to make an about-turn. The rule requiring wearing of masks indoors has been brought back even as the government rushes to vaccinate children. A “coronavirus commissioner” has been appointed for the first time to monitor arrivals at Israel’s main international airport. The interior minister says the airport will be shut if the situation worsens. The government has already postponed the planned reopening of the country to vaccinated tourists.
Meanwhile, the World Health Organization (WHO) says COVID-19 cases are rising again in Europe after two months of decline. A WHO official said the number of cases rose by 10% last week, warning a fresh wave would come “unless we remain disciplined”. The European Union’s (EU) disease control agency, European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, estimates that the Delta variant will account for 90% of new cases in the EU region by August end.
The Delta variant of COVID-19 has spawned a deadlier variant, called Delta Plus. India, which has so far detected over 40 cases of Delta Plus, has already declared it as a “variant of concern”. The country reported its first death due to this variant on Wednesday. Ten other countries, including the US, UK and Russia, have also reported Delta Plus cases.
The Delta Plus variant has the spike protein mutation K417N, also found in the Beta variant first detected in South Africa. While studies are on to test the effectiveness of available vaccines against the latest variant, experts say it is resistant to monoclonal antibodies cocktail. On the chances of another COVID-19 wave, they say it could happen if people fail to follow COVID-appropriate behaviour.
Meanwhile, chief medical advisor to US president Anthony Fauci has described the Delta variant as the “greatest threat” in the country’s fight against the pandemic as it is more transmissible. According to Fauci, the Delta variant now makes up over 20% of new cases in the US, compared to 10% two weeks ago.
While the daily new COVID-19 cases globally have come down to mid-March levels, the pandemic continues to rage in many countries in South America, Asia and Africa. Among the Top 10 countries in terms of daily new cases (listed below), as many as six are seeing fresh spikes in cases due to the different COVID-19 variants in circulation:
After ravaging India, the B.1.617.2 COVID-19 variant, which was first detected in the country and is now dubbed the ‘Delta variant’ by the World Health Organization, is spreading to the rest of the world. It is now present in as many as 60 countries and rapidly expanding there. Health officials the world over, including in countries with comparatively high vaccination rates, are alarmed. The Delta variant is estimated to be 50% more transmissible than the B.1.1.7 variant, first detected in the UK and now called the Alpha variant. The Delta variant can even affect those who have already had the infection. Public Health England data shows the Pfizer and AstraZeneca vaccines were only about 33% effective against the Delta variant after one dose, compared to 50% in the case of the Alpha variant. However, after two doses, the efficacy against the Delta variant increased to 88% and 60% for the Pfizer and AstraZeneca vaccines, respectively.
Clearly, vaccination remains important across variants. But thanks to the huge demand-supply gap, a major part of the world will have to bear the brunt of the Delta variant. Even in countries like the UK and US, where more than 40% of the population has been fully vaccinated, authorities are concerned over the Delta variant. In the UK, this variant has now overtaken the Alpha variant to contribute to more than 75% of the coronavirus cases. There has also been a noticeable increase in daily new cases and hospitalizations, so much so that the government has been forced to reconsider the plan to completely lift COVID-19 restrictions from June 21. Some experts are even warning of a third wave, though with fewer deaths thanks to vaccination. In the US, President Joe Biden and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases director Anthony Fauci have appealed to the country’s youths to get vaccinated to avoid a UK-like situation where the Delta variant is spreading more among those in the 12-20 age group.
The pandemic-triggered global chip shortage continues to hold strong with industry leaders hinting at a long haul. Some developments on this front during this week:
Counting the number of dead and infected due to COVID-19 has been a challenge ever since the pandemic started. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the official numbers released by the governments the world over are a “significant undercount”. The UN agency’s estimates put the real number of deaths at 2-3 times higher than the reported figures. It calculates that the total number of deaths due to COVID-19 in 2020 was at least 3 million, compared to the 1.8 million reported officially. With the death toll going up more in Latin America and Asia now, it would be more about relying on estimates than the official numbers as the two continents largely lack proper reporting infrastructure. However, the WHO points out that even in the developed world, where the reporting systems are more reliable, undercounts are likely. For Europe, it puts the number of deaths in 2020 at almost double the 600,000 figure reported officially. Apart from the reporting infrastructure, the WHO says, people dying before getting tested for the virus are also responsible for some part of the variance between estimates and official numbers.
Nowhere is this difference between official and unofficial numbers more glaring than in India, which has recorded the highest official daily death toll for any country during the COVID-19 pandemic. According to the New York Times, even this record number is an undercount. After consulting more than a dozen experts, the newspaper has come out with three possible scenarios. As against the 26.9 million infections and 307,231 deaths announced officially till May 24, the newspaper’s “conservative scenario” puts the infections at 404.2 million and deaths at 600,000, while “a more likely scenario” puts the infections at 539.0 million and deaths at 1.6 million. “A worse scenario” puts the infections at 700.7 million and deaths at 4.2 million.
All these numbers point to the need for boosting efforts for vaccination. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has proposed a $50-billion plan to end the pandemic by vaccinating at least 60% of the world’s population by the first half of 2022. The international financial institution estimates that doing so will inject around $9 trillion into the global economy by 2025 due to an early revival of economic activities. With rich nations likely to benefit more from this economic revival, there is a good incentive for them to be contributing towards this plan, feels IMF. Under the plan, the IMF is proposing widespread testing, lowering of restrictions on cross-border movement of vaccines and raw materials needed to manufacture them, donation of vaccines, upfront financing, investments to increase vaccine production, creation of sufficient infrastructure for vaccine deployment, and research into dose-stretching strategies.
The latest COVID-19 wave in India is showing signs of ebbing in the country’s urban areas, though not at the levels the government would like you to believe. On the other hand, the eastward movement of the wave continues, with some devastating scenes and figures which have only been recorded by the media to some extent. Lack of testing and shoddy data collection in these rural and backward areas ensure that we would never be able to understand the real scale of the pandemic there. Steps taken by different administrations to improve the situation have proven to be too little, too late.
To add to the woes, hospitals are reporting rising cases of black fungus, a disease that can lead to breathing problems, blurred vision, blackening of the nose, chest pain, blood in cough and even death if not treated in time. COVID-19 patients with comorbidities, particularly diabetes, and even doctors treating them are at risk here. Steroids used for treating COVID-19 can worsen diabetes in a patient.
Elsewhere, many East Asian countries are reporting daily records. Most of Thailand’s cases are coming from its prisons. Singapore has decided to shut its schools after finding that new variants, like the one found in India, are impacting more children than the previous strains. Indonesian authorities are anticipating a spurt in cases following celebrations marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan. In neighbouring Malaysia, a record 6,075 new cases were reported on Wednesday. In Vietnam, the fresh wave has resulted in temporary shutdowns in its industrial parks while Taiwan’s companies, including chip manufacturers, have announced measures to prevent the virus from affecting their employees. Japan has extended its third state of emergency till May 31 in Tokyo and other prefectures. Questions are being raised over the government’s decision to go ahead with the hosting of Olympics in July.
In Latin America, Brazil and Colombia are showing signs of plateauing of cases even as Argentina and Uruguay report doubling of daily cases. One distinguishing feature of the current wave in Latin America is that more young people are dying here compared to other regions.
If you thought COVID patients dying outside hospitals begging for oxygen and dead bodies lined up at crematoriums were the most horrifying scenes thrown up by the pandemic in India, then you are wrong. In scenes representative more of a different era from history, around 100 bodies were found floating on the river Ganges this week in two states in the country’s north. While the officials are yet to establish whether these bodies are of COVID victims, media reports talk of villagers immersing bodies of victims in the absence of wood needed for cremations. Even as India’s cities report a slight decrease in daily new cases, the countryside is facing the brunt of the second wave with poor healthcare infrastructure. This is also the area not properly covered by India’s much-criticized official COVID data.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), India now accounts for 30% of COVID deaths globally. The UN agency has now declared the B.1.617 variant of COVID-19, first detected in India in October, as a “variant of global concern” following some studies indicating it spreads more easily than the original virus. There are three other variants in this category – first found in the UK, South Africa and Brazil. The WHO says the B.1.617 variant has been detected in as many as 44 countries so far. After India, the maximum number of cases of this variant have been found in the UK.
Even as India and other developing countries grapple with a huge vaccine shortage, a piece of disturbing news has come from Seychelles, a small island country in the Indian Ocean. Seychelles is the most vaccinated country in the world, with around 60% of the population having taken two doses of either Sinopharm or AstraZeneca vaccine. But last week, according to the country’s health ministry, more than one-third of those testing positive had both doses. The WHO maintains that vaccinations alone can’t stop transmission of the virus.
India continues to report record COVID numbers. On Thursday, the country reported record daily new cases of 412,262 and record daily deaths of 3,980. Even in Nepal, which shares a long porous border with India, record numbers are being reported (daily new cases 8,605 and daily deaths 58 on Wednesday). According to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, Nepal is recording 57 times more cases than this time last month, with the towns bordering India “unable to cope with the growing number of people needing medical treatment”. The Himalayan country was forced to suspend its vaccination programme last month in the absence of supplies from India and China.
In India, the second wave is now spreading eastwards, a region with poor health infrastructure compared to the rest of the country, even as other regions continue to report record numbers. Experts say the second wave will hit its peak around May 15. At the same time, a top government expert says a third wave is inevitable, and it will require modifications in the vaccines to make them effective.
On the vaccination front, the US has finally decided to back the demand for a global waiver on intellectual property rights for COVID-19 vaccines. India and other countries have been lobbying at the World Trade Organization (WTO) for the waiver. World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus described the US move as a “monumental moment in the fight against COVID-19”. However, it would take months before this move translates into action on the ground, as WTO decision-making is based on consensus between its 164 members. Besides, the pharmaceutical industry has expressed its unhappiness over the US decision, saying it would affect its response to the pandemic.
The COVID-19 situation in India has now completely spiralled out of control. The official data, which has been repeatedly slammed by experts for underreporting numbers, on Wednesday registered record daily new cases and deaths of 3,79,257 and 3,645 respectively. Total deaths crossed the 200,000 mark on Tuesday. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), India now accounts for 38% of the total cases recorded globally. The multilateral body’s calculations show that the B1617 variant (or the double mutant variant) of the virus detected in India has a higher growth rate compared to other variants found in the country. The double mutant variant has so far been detected in 17 countries, including India, US, UK and Singapore.
The global community has moved fast to send emergency aid to India. The US, UK, Russia and many other countries are sending hundreds of oxygen cylinders, oxygen concentrators, ventilators, masks and other medical equipment badly needed by India. Besides, the US has promised to send a part of its vaccine surplus to India, in addition to raw materials required to produce vaccines. It will take some time before we start seeing the impact of all this aid on the ground. Right now, it’s apocalypse written all over India’s cities and towns. Dead bodies are lining up outside crematoriums and graveyards that have run out of space. Public parks and parking lots are being taken over to accommodate the dead. The poor are begging for oxygen outside the hospitals while the rich are doing the same on social media.
The Indian government is in war mode to stem the tide but all efforts seem to be falling short. On Wednesday, when the registrations opened for vaccination for those aged 18-45, the government website meant for the purpose crashed. Many are questioning the government’s rationale in not imposing a lockdown. “At this point lives are so much more important than livelihoods,” tweeted Bhramar Mukherjee, noted epidemiologist from the University of Michigan.
India’s hospitals are currently witnessing the kind of apocalyptic scenes that were seen by the hospitals in the US, Italy and other countries last year. Staff, beds, medicines, oxygen, ventilators, all are in short supply even as crematoriums and graveyards work non-stop to tackle the surge in dead bodies reaching their doors. Official statistics for Wednesday put the daily new cases at 295,041 and daily deaths at 2,023, both being the highest ever. But as was the case in the first wave, in the current wave too the experts are sceptical about the official data. They are projecting an as much as ten-fold difference between the official and unofficial numbers for daily new cases and a three-fold difference for daily deaths. Media reports seem to tally with the expert assessments. They talk about crematoriums receiving many more bodies for COVID protocol funerals than those that left the local hospitals the same day. Witness accounts mention how the metal parts of crematorium furnaces have started melting with round-the-clock use, something which was not visible during the first wave.
The Indian government has announced some steps to tackle the fresh wave, while saying another national lockdown is not possible as it would disrupt economic activities. The governments of the affected states have announced partial lockdowns (usually for night hours). On the vaccination front, India has reduced the minimum age for vaccination from 45 to 18. Vaccine manufacturers have been allowed to sell a part of their production in the open market. But the question remains, where is the vaccine stock to meet these requirements? The country, which till some weeks ago was the world’s biggest vaccine exporter, is now grappling with a huge shortfall. The Serum Institute of India, which is the world’s largest vaccine maker and meets 90% of India’s COVID vaccine demand, produces around 65 million doses per month currently. But taking the current daily vaccination average of 3.5 million doses per day, India needs 105 million doses per month. Add to this around 600 million people in the 18-45 age bracket who will become eligible for vaccination on May 1. The government has announced funding for the vaccine manufacturers to expand capacity but that is expected to come not before July.
In extraordinary situations like these, governments the world over face allegations of being tardy in their response (a local court has slammed the Indian government for “not waking up to reality”). While such accusations are not totally unfounded, what is more important is to learn from these never-seen-before situations and avoid a repeat. The coming days will put to test the combined wisdom of the human race on this count, as a fresh and more virulent COVID wave looms in many more countries.
The world is now in the grip of a much stronger second wave of COVID-19 and fast approaching the peak of 845,412 daily new cases that was hit on January 8, 2021. India, followed by the US, Brazil, Turkey and France, is the biggest contributor here. On Wednesday, the South Asian country hit a fresh all-time peak of 199,569 daily new cases, with daily deaths also rising proportionately. While the US is showing a plateauing graph of daily new cases, Brazil is witnessing a fresh surge.
This second wave is being attributed to the various variants of the virus that are now in circulation globally, besides the people and governments dropping their guard. Not all of these variants can be tackled by the vaccines currently available. India, for instance, has reported a ‘double mutant’ variant (two mutations in the same virus) that has already resulted in a few cases of reinfection post-vaccination, according to local media reports. Similarly, an Israeli study has concluded that a South African variant can “break through” the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to some extent.
This is not to say that vaccination is entirely ineffective. What these examples highlight is the dead heat we find ourselves in. To find whether the virus(es) will beat all vaccination efforts or vice versa, we will have to probably wait till the yearend or early next year. An overwhelming majority has no hopes of getting vaccinated within the next six months, and these are the very people facing the brunt of all kinds of variants in circulation. The longer they remain unvaccinated, the higher the chances are of deadly variants reaching countries with high vaccination rates and reinfecting them.
Whenever pushed to drop profit motive for a humanitarian cause, companies globally are usually evasive. Therefore, it didn’t come as a surprise when the vaccine companies failed to positively respond to the appeals made to them last year by many NGOs and multilateral bodies to share their formulas with generic manufacturers. In a fresh move, more than 160 former heads of state and Nobel laureates, including Joseph Stiglitz, Gordon Brown and Francois Hollande, have asked US President Joe Biden to push for an intellectual property waiver for COVID-19 vaccines. Let us hope for the best.
India is headed towards a COVID crisis of gargantuan proportions. This week, the country crossed its peak of daily new cases that it hit in September during the first wave. Not only this, the second wave is showing a steeper climb. From 103,793 new cases on April 4 to 126,315 new cases on April 7, the number has risen by 21.7% in just four days. Experts are blaming the fresh spurt on people and politicians dropping their guard and participating in large gatherings. While the central government has so far not indicated imposing another lockdown, some state governments have imposed night curfews in affected cities, besides shutting malls and places of worship.
India, which is the world’s largest vaccine manufacturer, has so far administered 94 million doses, placing it behind the US and China. All Indian residents above the age of 45 are eligible for vaccination. In a meeting with state chief ministers on Thursday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi rejected calls for lowering this age, saying the poor and elderly need to be prioritized. Many states have complained of vaccine shortages. But India’s health minister maintains that there are sufficient shots. India has already reduced the exports of the AstraZeneca vaccine, which meets 90% of its demand, to cater to the domestic requirement. In addition to laying stress on testing, the prime minister called for a “vaccine festival” from April 11 to 14 to vaccinate as many people as possible.
Meanwhile, AstraZeneca’s tale of woe continues. The UK now wants those under 30 to avoid taking the vaccine in case an alternative is available, as evidence has emerged that it may cause a rare type of blood clot in the brain. This comes after many countries in Europe recommending such a minimum age. Australia, South Korea and the Philippines have also put the vaccine on restricted use while the African Union has dropped plans to buy it. The world, developing countries in particular, is banking heavily on this vaccine due to the scale of its production and ease of storage.
The pandemic-triggered semiconductor chip shortage has spurred action on different fronts even as short-term prospects worsen. While governments are focusing on augmenting domestic capacity, chipmakers are busy in firefighting (literally in one case) and planning for the long term, besides dealing with takeover overtures. Some key developments on the chip front from the week gone by:
With the US, UK and some other countries showing a declining graph for daily new COVID-19 cases against the backdrop of increasing vaccination rates there, Brazil and India are now the new pandemic epicentres. A fresh wave of infections is spreading fast in the two countries, with Brazil reporting new peaks in daily cases and India’s cases touching five-month highs.
The surge in India has particularly alarmed the world. This is because India is also a vaccine manufacturing hub. In normal times, it caters to over 60% of the vaccine demand from developing countries. In the present pandemic, India has emerged as the biggest exporter of the AstraZeneca vaccine through a local firm, the Serum Institute of India (SII), which is also the world’s biggest vaccine maker.
However, following the emergence of the second wave, India decided to restrict the COVID vaccine exports, besides lowering the minimum age for vaccination from 60 and above earlier to 45 and above from April 1. While India is doing the right thing in prioritizing its population over other countries, what has compounded the situation is the country’s heavy reliance on the AstraZeneca vaccine, one of the only two vaccines cleared for use in the country.
India has committed to supply 200 million doses to low-income countries under the Covax programme of the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation (GAVI) and the World Health Organization (WHO). SII has a manufacturing capacity of around 60 million doses per month. GAVI says Covax has already notified participating countries that deliveries from SII will be delayed in March and April.
COVID-19 has brought to the fore weaknesses in global supply chains, from vaccines to semiconductors. Time for governments, multilateral bodies and businesses to get their act together.
Among the top 10 countries which reported the highest number of daily new COVID-19 cases on Wednesday, as many as six were from Europe. With the continent in the grip of a third wave of the virus, the less-than-projected supplies of various COVID-19 vaccines have triggered a blame game among the region’s countries. The European Union (EU) has threatened to ban exports of the vaccines to the UK over delay in deliveries of the AstraZeneca vaccine from there. The bloc says it is now thinking of linking the exports to the level of vaccination in a country, an allusion to the UK where more than 40 doses per 100 people have been administered so far compared to less than 20 per 100 in the remaining continent. The UK was quick to react, accusing the EU of brinkmanship and asking it to issue an explanation on its earlier assurances that already contracted exports would not be stopped. Further, on Thursday, the UK health secretary said the country would face vaccine shortages this month due to cuts from the Serum Institute of India, an AstraZeneca partner.
What has made the situation messy is some European countries’ decision to suspend the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine following cases of blood clot formation in the head of around three dozen recipients of the vaccine. The EU drug regulator says the vaccine is safe to use while the UK regulator says the incidence of blood clot formation was not more than what would have occurred naturally. Other countries, including Canada and India, too have announced to continue to use the vaccine. The World Health Organization (WHO), which cleared the AstraZeneca vaccine for emergency use last month, says the benefits of the vaccine far outweigh its risks.
Entering the second year of the COVID-19 pandemic, the virus continues to enjoy the upper hand in its battle with all efforts meant to contain it. More than our failure in quickly coming out with an effective vaccine or medicine, it is our failure to coordinate efforts towards a common goal that has hit the fight against the virus the most. According to Bloomberg, more than 334 million vaccine doses had been administered till Friday across 121 countries. The number is indeed impressive but what it fails to convey is the lopsided nature of the biggest vaccination programme ever. On one end of the scale are the developed countries from Europe and North America which have used their economic and political influence to procure vaccine supplies, including from plants located in developing countries. On the other end are countries from regions like Africa which have only the World Health Organization’s (WHO’s) sluggish vaccine distribution to look forward to. The following events from this week show all is not well on the vaccination front:
Many countries have been reporting a spurt in daily new COVID-19 cases for the past week or so. Experts are attributing this rise to new strains of the virus and the authorities and people becoming lax in following precautionary measures. In the US, President Joe Biden has come down heavily on some states’ move to end compulsory wearing of masks, describing such decisions as “Neanderthal thinking”. The World Health Organization (WHO) is alarmed too. “This virus will rebound if we let it,” warned WHO expert Maria Van Kerkhove at a briefing. In fact, the WHO projects that many countries in Europe will see a resurgence in cases in the coming days.
When the vaccines first came last year, the predominant view, including among experts, was that these will be effective in containing the virus spread. But since then, new variants of COVID-19 have cropped up which are not only resistant to the vaccines developed so far but can also evade the immunity developed by already infected people. As a result, experts have revised their forecast and are now talking about COVID-19’s impact lasting for “years to come”. This is not to say that the vaccines are completely ineffective. Experts acknowledge that even with the new variants, the current vaccines seem to prevent deaths and hospitalizations. Besides, companies will come out with updated vaccines to fight the new variants.
It is, therefore, important that the vaccination drive is stepped up, especially in the developing countries, which have been lagging so far. A part of the problem, as the WHO has been pointing out, is the hoarding of vaccine doses by rich nations. COVAX, the WHO-supported programme to provide vaccines to poor countries, is already feeling the heat from countries getting into bilateral deals with vaccine companies. The programme, which aims to send 237 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine to 142 countries by May-end, has seen a slow start, with Ghana and Ivory Coast becoming its first beneficiaries last week. “We can’t beat COVID without vaccine equity. Our world will not recover fast enough without vaccine equity, this is clear,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a briefing.
There is no sign of any let-up in the Covid-triggered semiconductor shortage being faced by the automotive sector since last year. The US sanctions against China’s chip factories and just-in-time supply schedule of a typical automobile factory have only added to the problem. Chipmakers too are focused on meeting the spurt in demand from consumer electronics firms, which buy high-end and high-margin chips. As a result, auto companies are lobbying their respective governments to promote creation of chip manufacturing facilities at the domestic level. On the other hand, some governments have approached Taiwan to resolve the crisis. Some key developments on the chip shortage front this week:
Even as COVID-19 cases show a steady decline globally, the Ebola virus has reared its head again in some African countries. Guinea and the Democratic Republic of Congo have reported fresh cases of the virus which saw its worst outbreak during 2013-2016 in West Africa and killed around 11,000 people. The World Health Organization (WHO) has asked six neighbouring countries to remain alert for a possible outbreak, while helping Guinea arrange 11,000 Ebola vaccine units. Compared to COVID-19, Ebola fares better in terms of vaccines and treatments, thanks to the lessons learnt in the previous outbreak.
All this brings us to the question which is becoming louder with the waning COVID-19 pandemic: How likely are we to see another pandemic of this size in coming years? Most experts say it is very likely. As we are already seeing in countries including the UK, South Africa and Brazil, a virus has a tendency to mutate into different variants, some of them more dangerous than the original. And the more the number of people it infects, the more the number of chances it gets to mutate. Each body a virus infects is a Petri dish for it to grow and change. Besides, a virus or its mutant can stay dormant for years.
So, what can the people and governments do to avoid, delay, or limit another pandemic? Reducing our interaction with nature by opting for sustainable habits is certainly in. The way we react to a pandemic at an international level is also important. Many of the problems faced in the current pandemic could have been easily avoided with a united global response. Already, the clamour for a global mechanism to deal with such a calamity is growing. UK prime minister Boris Johnson wants an international treaty on pandemics to ensure countries share the relevant data and also have an early warning system in place. European Council president Charles Michel has supported Johnson’s call.
The vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford has been dogged by delays and uncertainties both before and after its release. In the latest instance, a study in South Africa says the vaccine has little impact on a COVID-19 variant spreading fast in the country. Following the study, the South African government announced suspension of the programme to roll out one million doses of the vaccine. However, later it said it was considering a “stepped” rollout of the vaccine to monitor its efficacy. In the meantime, it has decided to use the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine.
Experts around the world, including from the World Health Organization (WHO), were quick to jump to the defence of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine. They were unanimous that it was too early to dismiss the vaccine as being ineffective. Some experts even raised questions on the South African study, saying it was conducted on a small scale and after testing the vaccine at an interval of four weeks between the first and second doses, even as evidence suggested that the vaccine was more effective at a longer interval between the two doses. Britain, where the vaccine is being used extensively, pointed out that it was effective in fighting the COVID-19 variant there. France said the vaccine worked well with “nearly all the variants”. The WHO said benefits of the vaccine outweighed any risks and the shot could be taken by all, including by those aged 65 and above.
Among the vaccines approved for use by different governments and international bodies, the AstraZeneca-Oxford one is the most crucial internationally, thanks to the geographical spread of its trials and production. While the wealthier nations are relying more on Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, developing countries, in particular, are betting heavily on the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine’s success. The COVAX scheme of the WHO and the GAVI vaccine alliance, which aims to deliver 1.8 billion doses to 92 poor countries in 2021, is relying heavily on the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine to make the programme successful.
Any inability of the leading vaccines to tackle any COVID-19 variant would put a big question mark on the global recovery from the pandemic.
COVID-19 has brought windfall profits to technology companies, as we have been reporting here. But at the same time, the unexpected surge in demand for products and services related to work-from-home and study-from-home has stretched the global supply chains like never before. The shortage of semiconductor chips which was noticed last year has now spread to the automotive sector. The following developments from this week convey the enormity of the issues being faced by automobile companies on this score:
To be fair, besides the pandemic, there are other reasons contributing to this shortage, like under-investment in chip capacity over the recent years, geopolitical tensions and emergence of new products like electric vehicles. According to a Counterpoint analysis, this shortage is unlikely to end before H2 2021. However, the analysis predicts that beginning this year, leading foundries will enter a cycle of massive production capacity expansion that will continue till 2023. And far from triggering a glut, this expansion will still fall short of meeting the entire demand.
All the top 10 countries ranked by their total number of COVID-19 cases – US, India, Brazil, Russia, UK, France, Spain, Italy, Turkey and Germany – are now showing a declining graph in varying degrees when it comes to daily new cases. Globally, the total number of cases crossed the 100-million mark on Wednesday. Total deaths now stand at over 2 million. India’s government said on Thursday that out of its 718 districts, 146 had reported no new case during the last seven days. The government has decided to relax curbs on public swimming pools and cinema halls from February 1. Russia has also lifted a travel ban for India, Finland, Vietnam and Qatar that was announced last year.
Apple on Wednesday announced financial results for its fiscal 2021 Q1 ended December 26, 2020. Riding high on the new 5G-capable iPhone series, along with the pandemic-triggered demand for its laptops and tablets, the company posted a record revenue of $111.4 billion, up 21% YoY. International sales accounted for 64% of the quarter’s revenue, according to an Apple release. Research from Counterpoint’s Market Monitor service confirms this stellar show by Apple – for October-December 2020, Apple captured the top spot in global smartphone shipments, growing 8% YoY and 96% QoQ.
Microsoft on Tuesday reported a 17% increase in its revenue at $43.1 billion for the quarter ended December 31. Its revenue from Azure cloud computing service grew 50%. LinkedIn revenue increased 23% while Xbox content and services revenue increased 40%, according to a company release. Microsoft’s revenue from the productivity and business processes segment was $13.4 billion during the quarter and increased 13%. The mobile version of Teams has 60 million daily users now.
The pandemic has also popularized newsletters. Realizing their potential, Twitter has acquired an e-mail newsletter start-up, Revue, for an undisclosed sum to attract users who want to earn revenue from their followers. Twitter said it would bring down the paid newsletter fee to help authors retain more revenue from subscriptions.
After remaining below the global average for a major part of 2020, Africa’s COVID-19 death rate now stands at 2.5%, compared to 2.2% in the rest of the world. Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention director John Nkengasong says the second wave of the pandemic is more aggressive, with as many as 21 countries in the continent reporting a death rate above 3%.
Africa’s plight also brings into focus the efforts being made by multilateral bodies and countries for a timely delivery of vaccines to poor countries. Sadly, the pace here has been frustratingly slow. Under the COVAX scheme of the World Health Organization (WHO) and the GAVI vaccine alliance, 1.8 billion doses are targeted to be delivered to poor countries in 2021. But thanks to a shortage of funds, the scheme is yet to secure sufficient shots. According to GAVI, the 1.8 billion doses will be sufficient to cover 27% of the population in the 92 countries eligible under the scheme.
Some poor countries lack the regulatory infrastructure needed to clear vaccines for use and, therefore, rely on the WHO for clearances. The global body is planning to clear several vaccines for their rapid deployment in poor countries starting February.
The regime change in the US has come as a big relief in the efforts to combat the pandemic, not only in the country but also the world. On January 21, US’ chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci told the WHO that the US government under President Joe Biden was willing to join the COVAX scheme to help poor countries.
The COVID-19 situation will get worse before it gets better. With the vaccination drive seeing a slow start globally, many countries are coming in the grip of a fresh wave of infections. Sweden, which had been avoiding putting curbs on the movement of its citizens in contrast to other European countries, has now brought in tougher rules for social distancing at shopping complexes, private gatherings and gyms. The country will close businesses if the situation worsens.
China has registered its biggest jump in cases in over 10 months as infections surge in the Heilongjiang province. This comes just before a national holiday when millions of people usually travel. A paper by Chinese researchers published in the PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases journal on Thursday said the number of people infected with COVID-19 in Wuhan could be three times the official figure. This conclusion was reached after analysing the blood samples of more than 60,000 people. Meanwhile, a World Health Organization (WHO)-led delegation arrived in Wuhan on Thursday to investigate the origins of COVID-19.
The Japanese government says it has detected a new variant of the virus in some travellers from Brazil. The variant has as many as 12 mutations.
The WHO hopes to launch COVID-19 vaccines in poor countries in February via its COVAX programme. It has asked countries to avoid striking bilateral deals with manufacturers so that poor countries can get access to the vaccines.
A fresh wave of the COVID-19 pandemic has gripped the world, whether due to a new strain of the virus or otherwise. In terms of daily new cases, the US (260,973 on Wednesday) is now followed by Brazil (62,532), UK (62,322), Germany (26,651) and France (25,379).
China on Thursday registered its biggest rise in daily cases in more than five months. The epicentre this time is Shijiazhuang, the capital of Hebei province, near Beijing. Over 200 cases have been confirmed in the city so far. Reports say the authorities are planning to test over 10 million people. On Wednesday, China said it was making arrangements for a visit by a World Health Organization (WHO) team looking into the origins of the virus. The statement came after the WHO expressed its concern over the delay in authorization for the visit.
Japan on Thursday declared a one-month emergency for Tokyo and three neighbouring prefectures after daily new cases hit a record in the capital. The government has avoided imposing wider restrictions due to their potential to cause economic hardships. According to Counterpoint’s Japan handset tracker, Japan’s smartphone sales plummeted 24% YoY in Q2 2020 but went up 10% YoY in the following quarter, supported by the government’s pro-economy stance in tackling the virus.
With the vaccine distribution campaigns still in their initial phases the world over, the fresh wave of infections will continue to inflict damage in the weeks to come. Stricter lockdowns like the latest one in the UK may have to be brought back.
There is no doubt the year 2020 will count among those which left an indelible mark on the course of history. Hardly any sphere of life has remained untouched from the COVID-19 pandemic. Many things have changed for the better and a few for the worse. Some of these changes will be permanent while others will depend on how early we are able to control the pandemic.
Climate change: Before the pandemic started, climate change was struggling to take prominence in human discourse. But COVID-19 has taught a valuable lesson — nature can quickly heal itself under the right conditions. With lockdowns in force globally, we saw pollution levels hitting multi-year lows and flora and fauna regaining some of the lost vitality. As soon as these lockdowns were lifted, we were back to square one. Expect policymakers to discuss effective mitigation of climate change more seriously in the coming year and beyond.
International cooperation: The pandemic has taught the world that global problems require global solutions. International cooperation was found wanting during the pandemic, whether in detection of the virus or development of vaccines. The post-pandemic world also requires a coordinated action on the economic and social fronts. Hopefully, the governments will get it right this time. There is an urgent need to give more teeth to multilateral institutions like the United Nations and World Health Organization.
Human behaviour: COVID-19 has imposed many restrictions on our normal behaviour, whether it is social distancing or wearing of masks. We have also “discovered” that work-from-home, study-from-home and shop-from-home are workable concepts.
Remote work: Before the pandemic, work-from-home as a concept was still taking baby steps. The CEOs were mostly sceptical about it. But COVID-19 has demonstrated that it is not only workable but also brings benefits to the employers in the form of cost savings on office maintenance. At the same time, it has also divided the employees among haves and have-nots. It is not possible for many to work from home as the nature of their work requires physical presence at the office.
E-commerce: Lockdowns meant no visits to markets and malls. As a result, e-commerce portals witnessed record traffic. Going forward, a big chunk of this increased traffic will become permanent. Same holds true for fintech.
Public transport: With the social distancing norms in force, public transport has taken a major hit. If the pandemic prolongs, there is a risk of people permanently shifting to personal vehicles and, therefore, increasing pollution and traffic congestion.
Real estate: With work-from-home taking roots, both residential and office property values in big cities will fall. Companies will opt for smaller offices while employees will prefer suburbs and small towns where property prices are lower.
Even as the COVID-19 vaccine distribution drive gathers steam in different parts of the world, a new ‘super-spreader’ strain of the virus has been detected in the UK. According to the country’s government, this new strain is up to 70% more infectious but there is no evidence to suggest that it is more deadly. Following the UK government’s statement, several countries stepped up testing of air passengers arriving from the UK and have already detected a few cases of the new strain.
A study by the Centre for Mathematical Modelling of Infectious Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, says the new strain is 56% more transmissible than other strains. “Nevertheless, the increase in transmissibility is likely to lead to a large increase in incidence, with COVID-19 hospitalisations and deaths projected to reach higher levels in 2021 than were observed in 2020, even if regional tiered restrictions implemented before December 19 are maintained,” the study adds. The authors of the study further warn that measures like the national lockdown imposed in England in November are unlikely to reduce infections unless schools and universities are also closed. “We project that large resurgences of the virus are likely to occur following easing of control measures. It may be necessary to greatly accelerate vaccine rollout to have an appreciable impact in suppressing the resulting disease burden,” the authors add.
From the COVID economy this week, Counterpoint expects that the global laptop market will hit a high in 2020, increasing 9% YoY to reach 173 million units. With uncertainty persisting over COVID-19, work-from-home and study-from-home will likely continue into 2021 and some part of 2022. Therefore, we expect the global laptop shipments to continue to grow slightly in 2021 and 2022. After reaching its peak in 2011, the laptop market growth had slowed down with the rise of alternatives such as smartphones and tablets.
With the developed countries beginning to roll out COVID-19 vaccines, the focus has now shifted to the developing countries and the challenges faced by them in procuring and distributing vaccines. Consider this: In the US, Pfizer’s vaccine costs $19.5 per dose while Moderna’s vaccine is expected to come at $37 per dose. In addition, these vaccines require procurement of special storage boxes. For a developing country, these costs are unaffordable, something which multilateral bodies are now discussing to find a way out.
The World Health Organization (WHO), in alliance with GAVI, plans to provide vaccines and diagnostic kits to economically weak countries through the Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator fund. However, there is a big funding gap of $28 billion that needs to be filled. The WHO is now considering financial instruments like concessional loans and catastrophe bonds to meet the urgent demand. At the same time, the WHO says it is in talks with Pfizer to make its vaccine a part of the multilateral body’s global rollout and bring down the price to match the budgets of poor countries.
In the meantime, a Reuters report says, the European Union (EU) is considering donating 5% of the COVID-19 vaccines it has secured to poorer nations.
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has launched a $9-billion facility to help countries fund purchase and distribution of COVID-19 vaccines.
The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) says it will mobilize $1 billion to help the Latin American and Caribbean countries acquire and distribute COVID-19 vaccines. This is in addition to around $1.2 billion already committed in 2020.
Among countries, Canada has promised to spend $380 million on COVID-19 tests, treatments and vaccines in low- and middle-income countries through the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF).
As nations begin rolling out mass vaccination drives to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, fresh issues are cropping up, highlighting the challenges associated with administering a vaccine at such a large scale.
The UK started its mass vaccination drive on Tuesday, and soon the country’s Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency was forced to issue an advisory that those having a history of anaphylaxis (an extreme allergic reaction) to some medicines or food should not get Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine.
In the US, highlighting the supply chain challenges being faced by the vaccination drive, Pfizer has slashed its COVID-19 vaccine production target for this year by half to 50 million doses. The decision was taken after some batches of the vaccine raw material failed to meet the standards.
Transportation of a COVID-19 vaccine like the one from Pfizer, which needs to be stored at minus 70 degrees Celsius, means having sufficient supplies of dry ice. But reports say officials in the rural areas of the US are not sure about the country’s dry ice production capacity to meet this spurt in demand. One can easily imagine the situation in a developing country with poor infrastructure.
Hackers, too, seem to be having a field day if Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech are to be believed. In a statement on Wednesday, the two companies claimed that documents related to their COVID-19 vaccine had been “unlawfully accessed” in a cyberattack on the European Medicines Agency, the EU body which assesses medicines and vaccines.
From the Covid economy this week, food delivery company DoorDash debuted at the NYSE on Wednesday with a gain of 80%, taking its value to around $71 billion.
Britain has become the first country in the West to approve a COVID-19 vaccine shot. Announcing the approval for Pfizer’s vaccine on Wednesday, the government described it as a ray of hope amid the surrounding gloom. It has already ordered doses for 20 million people against the country’s total population of around 67 million. Care home staff and residents will be the first ones to get the vaccine, followed by healthcare workers and the elderly. People will be contacted directly when their turn to get vaccinated comes. The main challenge with rolling out the vaccine is the requirement to keep it at around -80 degrees centigrade. This requirement will make it difficult to use the vaccine in countries with poor logistics infrastructure. Meanwhile, the UK government has also asked the country’s regulator to assess AstraZeneca’s vaccine for rollout, even as experts raise doubts over the trial data.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday it was reviewing the Pfizer vaccine trial data for “possible listing for emergency use” so that other nations could authorize the vaccine for national use. Pfizer has also approached the EU for a regulatory clearance, which is expected to come this month itself. However, the WHO believes that the world will not have sufficient quantities of vaccines in the next three to six months to prevent a surge in infections.
From the Covid-triggered economy this week, Salesforce is buying workplace messaging app Slack for $27.7 billion, betting on work-from-home outlasting the pandemic and the company getting into a better position to take on Microsoft. Slack has not been able to make the most of the opportunity presented by the pandemic.
The total number of COVID-19 cases in the world crossed the 60 million mark on Wednesday with the US (13,138,204 cases), India (9,266,697) and Brazil (6,166,898) continuing to be the top three most affected countries. In terms of daily new cases, apart from these three countries, rest all in the global top 10 belong to Europe, with Italy (25,853 daily new cases), Russia (23,675) and Germany (20,825) taking the top three slots for the continent. When it comes to daily new deaths, the picture changes considerably. The US continues to top here with 2,304 deaths, but is followed by Mexico (813), Italy (722), UK (696) and Poland (674).
While the recent announcements by Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca-Oxford on successful completion of their vaccine trials have raised hopes everywhere, it is the poor countries which run the risk of getting the vaccine horrendously late and thus suffering avoidable calamities. The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Monday that $4.3 billion more was needed for its global vaccine programme, which has raised $5 billion so far.
Dell continues to benefit from work-from-home and study-from-home with the soaring demand for its PCs and laptops giving the company a surprise 3% rise in Q3 revenue. Dell says it has not seen for over a decade the kind of demand it is seeing for its notebooks now.
Another sector that is emerging due to the pandemic is telemedicine. The sector is seeing an intense merger and acquisition activity, the latest being the merger of UpHealth Holdings Inc, Cloudbreak Health LLC and GigCapital2 Inc to create a $1.35-billion digital healthcare company.
The race for a COVID-19 vaccine is set to touch the finish line next month with the first batch of recipients getting the dose in December itself, thanks to the vaccine frontrunners starting production of their candidates before receiving the final approval.
Moderna announced on Monday that its vaccine candidate had been found to be 94.5% effective in preventing COVID-19 in a late-stage trial. Similarly, Pfizer said on Wednesday its candidate had been found to be 95% effective. The World Health Organization (WHO) demands at least 70% efficacy while the US Food and Drug Administration (USFDA) requires at least 50%.
If both Pfizer and Moderna get the emergency use authorization (EUA) from the US government, they will be in a position to supply around 60 million doses in the country in December this year. According to officials, US states are ready for the distribution at a 24-hour notice.
In a related development, USFDA said on Tuesday it had approved a COVID-19 self-testing kit that would provide the result within 30 minutes. The kit, produced by Lucira Health, has received the EUA for use by those aged 14 and above.
However, internationally, it is the vaccine candidate being developed by the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca that is inviting more attention due to its size and geographic spread. Here too, AstraZeneca says “billions of doses” of the candidate are already being produced with the late-stage trial data release expected by December.
The COVAX facility, set up by the WHO and the GAVI alliance, has managed to exceed the initial target of raising $2 billion to buy vaccine for poorer countries. The alliance said the collection would allow it to buy one billion doses for 92 countries.
With its rickety healthcare infrastructure and poor living conditions, Africa was being described as a COVID-19 disaster waiting to happen. But what has happened in reality is just the opposite. Even as the wealthier parts of the world grapple with their second or third waves of coronavirus, Africa has managed to retain the casualty numbers at the lowest levels among big continents. Against the World Health Organization’s (WHO’s) prediction in May that 190,000 people would die in the continent if measures to check the pandemic failed, in all 46,357 deaths had been reported till Wednesday. While experts have pointed out the low levels of testing in Africa as the likely cause of underreporting of deaths, reports from other quarters, including hospitals, have mentioned no unusual spurt in casualties.
There are many factors going in Africa’s favour here. The continent’s relative isolation means that many countries receive very few foreign visitors or send people abroad. A case in point is South Africa, which is among the African countries recording maximum interaction with the outside world, and also leads the table in total deaths related to COVID-19. Africa’s relative isolation also meant that the continent was hit by the virus late and countries got time to prepare themselves for the outbreak.
The other reason is the continent’s young population. According to the United Nations (UN), as much as three-quarters of Africa’s population is aged below 35. COVID-19 is known to have more adverse impact on older population and those with comorbidities.
The continent has also gone through other outbreaks like Ebola in the recent past to prepare for the current pandemic to some extent. Experts are also looking into whether a TB vaccine popular in the continent is helping impart immunity in this case also.
Even as the world awaits the US presidential election result, the country on Thursday reported its highest ever daily new COVID-19 cases at 118,204. In Europe, Denmark has decided to cull around 17 million minks after discovering that a mutation of the coronavirus found in the animal had spread to humans. The country’s prime minister said this particular strain of the virus showed decreased sensitivity against antibodies, which could affect the efficacy of any future vaccine.
According to the latest research from Counterpoint’s Market Monitor Service, the global smartphone market grew 32% QoQ to reach 366 million units in Q3 2020. This recovery was driven by key markets like the US, India and Latin America returning slowly to normal due to eased lockdown conditions. The smartphone market has shown resilience to the ill effects of COVID-19 both from the supply and demand side. Samsung regained the top spot, shipping 79.8 million units to register 47% QoQ growth. This is the highest ever shipment by Samsung in the last three years.
PayPal continued to benefit from the surge in digital payments in Q3. However, the company, while beating estimates for Q3, forecast Q4 profit to be below expectations, mainly due to the uncertainty surrounding the pandemic and concerns over the US presidential election outcome. The US-based company processed $247-billion payments in Q3, an increase of 36% from the year-ago period, and added 15.2 million new active users.
Japan-based gaming company Nintendo has revised the forecast for its operating profit by 50% to $4.31 billion as it expects to sell 24 million Switch gaming consoles in the year ending March 2021, up from the previous forecast of 19 million.
With the second wave of COVID-19 strengthening its grip on Europe, Germany and France have ordered fresh lockdowns. Germany has decided to impose a month-long lockdown which will see closure of restaurants, theatres, pools and gyms from November 2. France has decided that from October 30, anyone leaving home will have to carry a document justifying the presence outside. On the other hand, the UK is resisting calls for imposing a nationwide lockdown, saying it brings economic hardships.
On the vaccine front, US’ top infectious diseases expert Anthony Fauci has said the country will get a vaccine only after January next year. Reports in the UK say the government there expects the results from the trials for Pfizer’s candidate would be available before those for AstraZeneca’s candidate, and that the Pfizer vaccine could be available for distribution before Christmas. An assessment by the European Union says the bloc will be able to administer a vaccine to all its inhabitants only by 2022 as the sufficient number of doses won’t be available till then.
From the COVID-triggered economy this week, Azure, Microsoft’s cloud computing business, has reported a 48% rise in its revenue for the latest quarter. Teams software continues to attract new users even as the demand for Windows for laptops and Xbox gaming services soars.
Sony has registered a record Q2 profit, convincing it to raise its outlook for the annual profit. The company’s gaming business continues to perform well before the launch of the PlayStation 5 (PS5) console next month.
Capgemini has reported an 18.4% increase in its Q3 revenue at $4.74 billion on good show by its digital and cloud offerings, which now bring more than half of the French company’s business.
Even as the total number of COVID-19 cases globally crossed the 41-million mark this week, with daily new cases hitting fresh peaks in Europe, the World Health Organization (WHO) came out with a study that said remdesivir, hydroxychloroquine, lopinavir and interferon were not effective in treating coronavirus. These are among the handful of drugs being used for the treatment. Interim trials by the WHO under its Solidarity Trial programme suggest these drugs are ineffective in reducing hospital stays and death risk. More than 11,000 adults with COVID-19 in around 30 countries participated in the trial. Reacting to the trial findings, Gilead, which produces remdesivir, said other studies had showed the efficacy of remdesivir. Besides, the US company said, there were differences in the way the WHO trial was conducted at different locations. Following the trial findings, the WHO announced that the Solidarity Trial would now cover monoclonal antibodies and other antiviral drugs.
On the vaccine front, Pfizer has said it could file for US authorization of its COVID-19 vaccine candidate in late November. This means there is a possibility of the company’s vaccine becoming available in the US this year itself. Pfizer is developing the vaccine with German partner BioNTech.
From the COVID economy this week, a World Economic Forum (WEF) study says that the pandemic has accelerated the shift towards automation in industries. Robots may end up destroying 85 million jobs over the next five years, the study warns.
Technology companies benefitting from work-from-home and study-from-home continue to report good numbers. US’ Verizon Communications beat third quarter profit estimates on Wednesday. Operating revenue fell 4.1% to $31.54 billion. Net income fell to $4.50 billion from $5.34 billion a year ago. The company has raised its adjusted EPS growth range guidance for 2020 from -2%–2% to 0%–2%.
Cyber security firm McAfee has raised $620 million in its US IPO. The IPO values the company at $8.6 billion. In 2016, TPG had bought a majority stake in McAfee from Intel in a deal that valued the company at $4.2 billion after including debt.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) has reported a record net profit of $4.8 billion in the July-September quarter, an increase of 36%. The company is betting big on the projected demand for the next two years. It has also raised its revenue forecast for 2020 from more than 20% increase to more than 30% jump now.
On the other hand, the boom triggered by the virus seems to be over for Netflix. On Tuesday, the company reported its weakest subscriber additions in four years, mainly due to lifting of pandemic restrictions during Q3. In the quarter, Netflix added 2.2 million paid subscribers, missing analysts’ and own forecasts.
The second wave of COVID-19 is turning out to be more destructive in Europe, with the top five countries in terms of total number of cases — Russia (1,354,163), Spain (937,311), France (779,063), UK (654,644) and Italy (372,799) — reporting record daily new cases during the last month. As a result, lockdowns and shutdowns are back in many countries. France has announced night curfews in its major cities, including Paris, while Germany and Italy have ordered midnight closure of bars and restaurants. The UK is applying three levels of restrictions depending on the prevalence of the virus at a regional level. However, even at its highest level, it is still not as strict a lockdown as seen in March and April.
On the vaccine front, Johnson & Johnson said on Tuesday it was pausing its vaccine trial after a participant developed some unexplained illness. A panel will study the case before deciding on the trial restart. Similarly, Eli Lilly and Co said on Tuesday the US government had paused its trial for an antibody treatment following safety concerns.
China has joined a World Health Organization (WHO)-backed vaccine distribution programme COVAX. The country is planning to buy vaccines for 1% of its population (around 15 million) through this programme. Norway has announced that it will offer a COVID-19 vaccine free of charge to its citizens while making it a part of the country’s vaccination programme.
From the COVID-triggered economy this week, Walt Disney Co said on Monday it had restructured its media and entertainment units to push growth of streaming services like Disney+. Under the new structure, production and distribution of programming will form two different units.
Amazon finally managed to organize its Prime Day event in the US on October 13-14. The event is usually held in July but was postponed due to the pandemic. Rivals like Walmart, Best Buy and Target have also launched their competing sales, keeping in mind the reduced footfalls at their stores due to COVID-19.
A survey by Cisco says that as many as nine out of 10 employees want to retain the option of working from home after the COVID-19 restrictions are lifted.
Ten months into the COVID-19 pandemic, around 10% of the total global population of 7.8 billion has been infected by the virus, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). On Thursday, estimates based on the official data put the total cases globally at just over 36 million (around 0.5% of the global population). “Our current best estimates tell us that about 10% of the global population may have been infected by this virus. It varies depending on the country, it varies from urban to rural, it varies between different groups. But what it does mean is that the vast majority of the world remains at risk,” said WHO expert Mike Ryan.
On the vaccine front, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Tuesday there was hope that by the end of this year “we may have a vaccine”. According to another WHO official, China is in talks with the global body to make available its vaccines for international use. Reports in the UK say AstraZeneca and Oxford University’s vaccine candidate could see a mass rollout in the country in three months and cover all adults within six months. The European Medicines Agency said it was reviewing in real time the data from the trials for the AstraZeneca and Oxford University’s, and Pfizer and BioNTech’s vaccine candidates to speed up the approval process. In the US, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Eli Lilly have applied for emergency use of their antibody treatments following encouraging results.
From the COVID economy this week, streaming service provider fuboTV raised $183 million through an initial public offering. The US-based company is now valued at over $620 million. It had 286,126 paid subscribers in Q2, an increase of 47% YoY.
Levi Strauss on Tuesday reported 52% growth in its online sales in Q3, beating expectations and giving the company a surprise profit. On the other hand, the world’s second largest fashion retailer, H&M, said on Thursday that it was planning to close around 250 of its stores as shoppers were increasingly shifting to online channels.
One in 15 people aged above 10 in India had been exposed to COVID-19 by August, according to the latest sero-survey conducted by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR). Such surveys involve testing of blood serum of a section of the population. Further, the survey says 7.1% of the adult population, aged above 18, showed evidence of past exposure to the virus. This is a big jump over the 0.73% reported in the previous sero-survey. India’s total population is estimated at 1.3 billion. Going by the latest ICMR survey, over 60 million people in India may have been infected by the virus, which is almost double the number for the whole world. On Wednesday, the total number of COVID-19 cases in the country were put at 6,310,267 based on officially available data. India is only second after the US (7,447,282) globally in total number of cases.
Even as the number of cases continue to rise in India, it has announced further easing of curbs on certain activities from October 15. These include educational institutions, cinema halls, multiplexes, holding of certain exhibitions, swimming pools and social gatherings having more than 100 people.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday it felt that the number of deaths globally were higher than what was being officially reported. A WHO official said thousands more were “fighting for their lives in hospitals all over the world”.
On the vaccine front, Moderna has said it would not be in a position to seek emergency authorization for its COVID-19 vaccine candidate before November 25, a Financial Times report said quoting the company’s CEO. In Europe, the regulators are planning an accelerated review of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine candidate, even as they cleared Becton Dickinson & Co’s 15-minute test to detect the virus.
From the COVID economy this week, SoftBank’s robotics unit has said it would bring a robot named Servi, developed by US-based Bear Robotics, to Japan to help restaurants grapple with labour shortage and social-distancing norms. To be launched in January, the robot will cost 99,800 yen ($950) per month, excluding taxes, for a three-year plan.
A second wave of COVID-19 has tightened its grip on key economies like Russia, Canada, UK, Germany, France and Spain. The global financial markets took note of this and got into a correction mode this week. In Europe, the second wave is being driven by younger generations – especially after schools reopened in September. However, most youngsters suffer modest symptoms. The concern is more for older populations. And it is among this group that hospitalizations are now also beginning to escalate.
In Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a national address that the country was “on the brink of a fall that could be much worse than the spring”.
Strong second waves of infections emerging in France and Spain. Argentina now the most impacted market in Latin America.
After a slight dip in August, daily infections are reaching new highs
A study by Houston Methodist Hospital says that a more contagious strain of COVID-19 dominates in the second wave of the virus in Houston, Texas. As many as 5,085 genomes from virus samples recovered during the two waves of the pandemic were examined as part of the study that is yet to be peer-reviewed.
The UK is expected to commence challenge trials of a vaccine, likely in January. These trials will vaccinate healthy young volunteers and then dose them with the virus to observe what happens. This is a key step in isolating an effective vaccine.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Wednesday that the virus had lasted longer than expected and it would take some countries’ economies a few years to recover from the pandemic. The European Commission on Friday asked its members to increase the pace of rollout of fibre and 5G networks to help revive the region’s virus-hit economy and secure its “technological autonomy”. The Commission further said: “The Commission invites member states to come together to develop, by March 30, 2021, a common approach, in the form of a toolbox of best practices, for the timely rollout of fixed and mobile very high-capacity networks, including 5G networks.”
From the COVID economy this week, Microsoft on Monday announced that it would acquire ZeniMax Media for $7.5 billion, adding popular game franchises like Doom, Fallout and Dishonored to its Xbox offering. Microsoft said it was planning to offer future games from Bethesda, which is a ZeniMax Media unit, as part of its monthly Xbox Game Pass subscription service.
Zero-fee stock trading app Robinhood, often credited with popularizing stock trading among stuck-at-home millennials, has raised an additional $460 million as part of its Series G fund-raising round. In August, it had raised $200 million as part of the same round. Now the company is valued at over $11.7 billion.
Shares of online prescription drug platform GoodRx Holdings surged 40% at their Nasdaq debut on Wednesday. The company has raised $1.14 billion through its initial public offering.
Global coronavirus cases crossed the 30 million mark this week, with the epicentre gradually shifting to India. The country’s total number of officially reported cases is expected to cross that of the US next month if current rates of increase persist. Many hospitals in the worst affected regions of India have already started reporting oxygen shortages.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday that worrying trends were visible in some countries before the approaching onset of winter influenza season, with hospitalisations increasing “particularly in Spain, France, Montenegro, Ukraine and some states of the US”. The WHO has asked people who fall in the high-risk category for COVID-19 to get themselves vaccinated against flu.
The chart below shows that France and, especially, Spain are experiencing stronger second waves of infection than in the spring.
The race for a COVID-19 vaccine has intensified with over 150 candidates in the fray globally. AstraZeneca, which had halted its global trial for a vaccine being developed along with Oxford University after a subject in the UK reported some illness, on Saturday announced resumption of the trial following clearances from safety watchdogs. Supported by the Trump administration, many companies in the US have already started mass production of some vaccine candidates in the hope that one of them will clear the required trials. Reports say plans are being finalised to ship the vaccines within a day of getting the regulatory clearance.
Russia and China’s efforts for a vaccine, though low on support from the global medical fraternity, are claimed to have produced positive results. Both the countries have tied up with other countries for manufacture or distribution of their vaccines.
From the COVID economy this week, data warehousing company Snowflake made a stellar debut in the stock market on Wednesday, more than doubling its IPO price of $120 per share. The Warren Buffett-backed company has raised more than $3 billion in the largest US listing this year so far.
With its cloud business booming, Oracle has reported 1.6% increase in its total Q1 revenue to $9.37 billion, beating estimates. The company’s unit that also houses its cloud business reported 2.1% increase in revenue to $6.95 billion.
Amazon has announced that it will hire 100,000 more workers for full and part-time roles in the US and Canada this year to meet the spurt in demand due to the pandemic. In addition, it is also opening as many as 100 new warehouses and operations sites.
Following the expected trajectory, India on Monday overtook Brazil as the country with second highest number of total COVID-19 cases. On Wednesday, India reported 95,529 daily new cases, taking the total to 4,462,965, against Brazil’s 34,208 daily new cases and 4,199,332 total cases. However, in total deaths, India is at third position with 75,091 deaths till Wednesday against Brazil’s 128,653.
What is more worrying is that India’s cases are rising steadily with the peak nowhere in sight. Add to this the rickety health infrastructure and densely populated areas with poor hygiene, and you have a big disaster waiting to happen.
In the race to find a vaccine for COVID-19, two of the front-runners had some discouraging news this week. On Tuesday, AstraZeneca announced that it had halted its global trial for a vaccine being developed along with Oxford University after a subject in the UK reported some illness. An independent panel will now go through the clinical trial data before giving a go-ahead to restart the trial. On Friday, Moderna said it had asked its teams to enrol more members from the minority communities for the clinical trials for its vaccine candidate, even if that meant delaying the trials.
Commenting on the AstraZeneca trial suspension, the World Health Organization (WHO) was reported to have said such suspensions were not uncommon and that the safety of subjects was most important. Meanwhile, in an unusual move, leading vaccine developers in the US and Europe on Tuesday pledged that they won’t bow to any pressure to rush through their trials and would follow all safety and efficacy standards. AstraZeneca and Moderna participated in the pledge. All these companies were further buttressed by the US National Institutes of Health chief, who told a congressional hearing on Wednesday that there was no way to tell if a safe vaccine would be available before the November 3 presidential election, thus contradicting President Donald Trump.
COVID-19 continues to affect the technology companies in different ways. On Tuesday, Apple announced that its annual event on September 15 would go virtual for the first time. Apple usually showcases its most important products in these events, but this time around expectations are that new versions of iPhone will miss the September 15 date.
As testing is stepped up in India, a true picture of the spread of COVID-19 pandemic in the country is emerging. And the news is certainly not good. On Sunday, India reported the biggest single day rise in coronavirus cases anywhere in the world so far. As against the previous record of 78,619 cases in the US on July 24, India reported 79,457 cases on August 30. Among the top three countries in terms of total number of cases, the top two — the US and Brazil — are now on a downward trajectory when it comes to daily new cases.
In the US, the White House has rejected the World Health Organization’s (WHO’s) concerns over the move to introduce a COVID-19 vaccine in the country without completing the Phase III clinical trials. A White House spokesman said the president would spare no expense to ensure that “any new vaccine maintains our own FDA’s gold standard for safety and efficacy”. Calling the WHO “corrupt”, the spokesman said the US would not join any effort led by the multilateral organization to develop and manufacture a vaccine. Meanwhile, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reportedly asked all states to start preparations for distribution of a vaccine among high-risk categories beginning late October.
Even as efforts are on to have a vaccine as soon as possible, existing medicines continue to get a chance to prove their efficacy. An analysis of results from seven separate global trials has revealed that steroids can lead to survival of 68% of the sickest COVID-19 patients compared to around 60% in case of those not taking steroids. Following these results, the WHO has updated its advice to include a “strong recommendation” for use of steroids in seriously ill patients.
Technology companies are also doing their bit in the fight against COVID-19. Google and Apple have come out with a new system, Exposure Notifications Express, which makes it possible for health officials to use smartphones for contact tracing without needing an app. Under the system, officials have to submit a configuration file to Google and Apple, which then use it to set up a functionality that phone users can opt for to determine their possible proximity to any person testing positive for COVID-19.
Even as the COVID-19 cases crossed the 24-million mark globally this week, countries which had seen a spurt in cases during the initial phase of the pandemic are reporting fresh spikes. On Wednesday, Italy reported 1,367 new cases, highest in three-and-a-half months. The fresh wave in the country is being blamed on the citizens returning from vacations. South Korea reported 441 new cases on Wednesday, which is the most since March, while France reported 5,429 cases on the same day, the most since mid-April.
More distressing news came from Hong Kong on Monday, where researchers reported the first documented case of coronavirus re-infection. A man who had recovered from COVID-19 got infected again by a different strain after four-and-a-half months, according to the University of Hong Kong experts.
In the US, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has triggered a big controversy by stating that asymptomatic people may not need to be tested. Experts and politicians have slammed the move, with many saying it is politically motivated. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases director, Anthony Fauci, is reported to be concerned over the guidance. He fears people would be misled into believing that asymptomatic cases are not of great concern.
In the COVID-spurred economy this week, Salesforce on Tuesday reported a 29% jump in its Q2 revenue to $5.15 billion, beating estimates. Good demand for its software for remote work has convinced the company to raise its 2021 revenue forecast to $20.7 billion-$20.8 billion from $20 billion.
Box Inc on Wednesday said its Q2 revenue increased 11.4% to $192.3 million, beating estimates, on more customers for its online services for content management and storage, and for data security products.
According to a KPMG survey, 80% of business leaders have accelerated their digital expansion plans, with 69% saying they are planning to reduce their office space in the short term.
UK’s largest supermarket Tesco on Monday said it would create 16,000 new permanent jobs to service its growing online business.
India is sitting on a COVID bomb if a study by a leading chain of laboratories in the country is to be believed. Antibody tests conducted by Thyrocare across the country show that the virus has infected one in four Indians. This could potentially take the total number of cases in the country to 325 million, much higher than the government estimates.
Concerned over some developed nations reaching deals with companies for vaccine candidates, the World Health Organization (WHO) has lashed out at this ‘vaccine nationalism’ that encourages hoarding and overlooks the interests of developing nations. The global body wants its 194 member countries to join an agreement for a ‘COVAX Global Vaccines Facility’ to share vaccine candidates with developing countries. It has set August 31 as the deadline for joining the pact.
With the pandemic forcing a tectonic shift in the way we live and work, investors have started betting big on the long-term success of tech companies like Apple. Their stocks and valuations have hit record highs even as the broader economy plumbs new depths.
On Wednesday, Apple became the first listed US company with a $2-trillion stock market value. The company’s shares rose to as high as $468.65, which is equal to a market capitalization of over $2 trillion. The company’s stock has been much in demand following its impressive results for the quarter ended June 27.
Another US company that has seen its valuation rise due to the pandemic is fintech start-up Robinhood Markets. The company, which has contributed to the surge in day trading among stuck-at-home millennials, has raised $200 million from D1 Capital Partners at a valuation of $11.2 billion in the latest funding round.
The pandemic may have hit hard Airbnb’s main business, but it can’t stop the company from betting big on future and bringing an IPO. Airbnb on Wednesday confidentially filed for an IPO with the SEC, with the details like the number of shares on offer and the price range yet to be worked out.
In Finland, Rovio Entertainment, known for its Angry Birds game series, has reported a 160% jump in its Q2 adjusted operating profit at euro 13.8 million on surge in demand due to the COVID-19 lockdowns.
India’s ballooning COVID-19 cases continue to bring worry to health officials and policymakers. Though the country stands third globally after the US and Brazil in terms of total number of cases, it has been leading in daily new cases since August 4, with the graph following a definite rising trajectory. On Wednesday, India reported 61,252 daily new cases, compared to 54,519 in the US and 54,923 in Brazil.
However, the biggest news this week on the COVID-19 front came from Russia on Tuesday when President Vladimir Putin announced that his country had become the first one to approve a COVID-19 vaccine after testing it on humans for less than two months. Named ‘Sputnik V’ after the world’s first satellite, which was launched by the erstwhile Soviet Union, the vaccine is expected to enter mass production by this year-end. But experts the world over have raised an alarm over Russia’s claims on the vaccine, saying in the absence of proper data and large-scale trials the vaccine’s efficacy cannot be trusted. Russian health minister Mikhail Murashko has dubbed these concerns as “groundless”.
Cisco has reported 9% fall in its revenue to $12.2 billion for the fourth quarter ended July 25. However, it managed to beat estimates on increased demand from the work-from-home (WFH) segment for its web security and teleconferencing solutions. But the bigger picture is not so rosy for the company. It has forecast its Q1 numbers below estimates and announced a restructuring plan as the pandemic forced its clients to hold back spending.
World’s biggest electronics contract manufacturer and Apple supplier Foxconn has reported a better-than-expected second quarter profit of $778.54 million, with the rising demand from the WFH segment managing to offset sluggish smartphone sales.
The pandemic has hit demand for Toshiba’s electronic devices and chip-making equipment, with the Japanese conglomerate registering its first quarterly operating loss in nearly four years. The company reported an operating loss of $118 million for the June quarter.
China’s gaming and social media major Tencent has reported a 37% rise in its second quarter net profit at $4.8 billion, beating estimates. Though the COVID-19 pandemic hit its other entertainment businesses, it pushed the demand for the company’s video games.
The total number of deaths due to the COVID-19 pandemic crossed the 700,000 mark on Wednesday with the US alone accounting for more than 160,000 deaths. However, in terms of fresh daily deaths, Brazil (1,322) nudged past the US (1,311) on Wednesday. In daily new cases, India took the top slot with 56,626 cases. However the US data is becoming increasingly dubious following the US administration’s insistence on taking over some aspects of data reporting from the US CDC.
A big casualty of COVID-19 has been the education of children the world over. On Tuesday, United Nations (UN) Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned that the world was facing a “generational catastrophe” due to shutting down of schools. According to UN calculations, schools remained closed in around 160 countries in mid-July, impacting more than 1 billion students, with around 40 million missing out on pre-school. This is accentuating the digital divide where relatively affluent children can often use PCs, tablets or smartphones to reach online learning resources, but many in families with marginal incomes cannot.
From the COVID-created economy this week, Teladoc Health announced on Wednesday that it would buy chronic care provider Livongo Health in a $18.5-billion deal, spurred by the boom in online medical care due to coronavirus.
Sony reported a marginal 1.1% fall in profit for the June quarter, surprising markets and analysts. The company registered a profit of around $2.15 billion riding the demand for its gaming products, which managed to neutralize the impact of profit drop in other business segments.
Another Japanese major, Nintendo, has reported an operating profit of $1.37 billion for the June quarter on the soaring demand for its Switch device and popular title ‘Animal Crossing: New Horizons’.
On the other hand, Japan’s Sharp reported 38% drop in its June-quarter operating profit at $85.2 million, beating analyst estimates. The pandemic has affected its sales of electronic devices and office printers.
Many other companies have reported earnings with several high profile component players reporting slightly better results than they expected. They continue to expect the 2H to be down slightly (c5% Y/Y) with smartphones and compute a bit better due to WFH/distance learning. But automotive likely a bit worse. Macro conditions cloud the perspective as the full impacts on unemployment are not yet visible due to job retention/furlough schemes that are beginning to wind down in some countries, leading companies to make people redundant in increasing numbers.
COVID-19 seems to have shown the way forward to the newspaper industry. The New York Times’ revenues from its digital business overtook that of the legacy print segment in the second quarter for the first time in its history.
COVID-19 has tightened its grip across countries with the total number of cases crossing the grim milestone of 17 million. It took just three days for the cases to rise from 16 million to 17 million.
In another grim figure, COVID-19 deaths in the US crossed the 150,000 mark this week. This is around quarter of the global number and higher than any other country. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump’s security adviser Robert O’Brien has tested positive for the virus, becoming the country’s highest-ranking official to test positive so far.
However, official statistics for the US have come into doubt now that the White House has effectively taken over reporting data from the CDC. US data was always complex due to multiple agencies across the states having a hand in compiling the statistics. However, there is now the shadow of political interference to further muddy the water.
In India, after last week’s surveillance study report which implied at least 6.6 million cases in Delhi, India’s most populous city, a similar report came this week for Mumbai, the second most populous city. According to the report, around half of the population in city’s slums is carrying the virus. To understand the scale here, Mumbai has a total population of around 12 million with 65% of it living in slums.
This grim picture of galloping cases and no concrete cure has forced Google to extend work-from-home (WFH) for its employees till June next year. Others are expected to follow suit. The company was planning to reopen its offices globally in June. Similarly, the world’s biggest technology and gadget show CES, which is held in Las Vegas every January, will be online-only next year, the Consumer Technology Association has decided.
Samsung’s operating profit increased 23% in Q2 on good sales of DRAM memory chips to online providers. The company’s chip arm’s operating profit soared around 60%. Samsung forecasts that the global demand for smartphones and consumer electronics will recover in the second half of the year.
The COVID-19 lockdowns did hit Verizon’s store sales in Q2, but they also pushed the demand for the company’s internet services, adding more phone subscribers. As a result, the fall in total operating revenue was contained at 5.1%.
Music and video streaming apps have been among the biggest beneficiaries of the COVID-imposed lockdowns. But the spurt in subscribers didn’t help much in pushing up Spotify’s Q2 numbers. Reason: The pandemic also kept the advertisers away! Revenue from advertisements fell over 20% during the quarter.
However, this was not the case with online payments processor PayPal. The company reported an 86% increase in its Q2 profit. It processed $222 billion over the quarter, which is 30% more than the same period last year.
COVID-19 cases crossed the 15-million mark globally this week, with South Africa replacing Peru among the top five worst affected countries.
Brazil reported a record number of daily new cases on July 23 at 67,860. The World Health Organization (WHO) had on Friday predicted a plateauing of the country’s graph. Meanwhile, Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro on Wednesday tested positive for the third time since July 7, when he was forced to go into self-isolation at his official residence. Bolsonaro had been opposing measures to curb the pandemic, including wearing of face masks.
India also reported a record number of new cases on the same day, at 45,720. However, new research suggests that almost a quarter of Delhi’s 29 million residents may have had COVID-19. Among a random sample of 20,000 Delhi residents, antibodies were found in 23.5% of the tests. This would imply at least 6.6 million cases in the city – vastly more than the official 124,000 cases.
The number of cases in the US continue to accelerate. They are likely to surpass the 4-million mark by Friday, meaning it will have taken just 16 days to add a million cases; the previous million took 27 days. Only Chile has more official cases per capita than the US.
Looked at by continent, the Americas continue to dominate the viral outbreak picture. Asia is also rising fast – with much of this being accounted for by India. Africa seems relatively unaffected, but the data from South Africa points to the likely level of infections being much higher than officially reported. South Africa had 60% more deaths from “natural causes” than normal, indicating that many of these could have been related to COVID-19, which would imply a much higher number than that officially reported.
As was being predicted in media reports, The Lancet on Monday reported positive results from the trials conducted by AstraZeneca and Oxford University for a vaccine candidate. Called AZD1222, the vaccine was able to produce an immune response in early-stage trials. The WHO had earlier described it as the leading candidate for a vaccine. However, on Wednesday, the global body added a note of caution, saying the world would have to wait till early 2021 for any vaccine to hit the market.
COVID-19 continues to impact the balance sheets of technology companies. On Wednesday, Microsoft reported 13% increase in its fourth quarter revenue at $38 billion. This increase came on the back of 14% rise in revenue from the sale of its products for PCs and Xboxes. Similarly, the company’s cloud computing arm, Azure, reported around 50% jump in sales, pushing the overall revenue of Microsoft’s Intelligent Cloud segment by 17% to $13.4 billion. On the other hand, COVID-19 negatively impacted Microsoft’s professional networking site LinkedIn’s numbers, thanks to a weak job market.
International Business Machines (IBM), a Microsoft rival, on Monday reported that revenues at its cloud business increased 30% to $6.3 billion in the second quarter.
Logitech International said on Monday its non-GAAP operating income had increased by over 75% in its first quarter, riding on the rising demand for video conferencing products, webcams and headsets.
On the deal street, Norway’s Adevinta will buy eBay’s classified ads business for $9.2 billion, betting on increased traffic at digital marketplaces.
Among the top five countries by total number of COVID-19 cases, three — Brazil, Russia and Peru — have followed a downward or plateauing graph for daily new cases, for the past couple of weeks (see chart). But in the case of Brazil (daily new cases at 39,705 on July 15) and Peru (3,857), we will have to wait before reaching a certain conclusion, mainly due to inadequate testing in the two Latin American countries. Russia’s graph (6,422) displays a definite downward trajectory after reaching a peak on May 11 (11,656) while the United States (71,750), India (32,682) and Mexico (7,051) continue their journey upwards.
Two pieces of heartening news on the COVID-19 battlefront came last week, with financial markets across the world also acknowledging it. On Tuesday, US-based company Moderna announced that it was planning to start a late-stage clinical trial around July 27 for its vaccine candidate. In its early-stage study, the candidate showed it was safe and managed to provoke immune responses in all the 45 volunteers.
In the other good news, The Lancet reported that it would publish on Monday the Phase I clinical trial data on a COVID-19 vaccine candidate being developed by British-Swedish company AstraZeneca and Oxford University. This candidate has already reached the Phase III trial stage in Brazil. Media reports say the data to be released on Monday will have “positive news”. World Health Organization (WHO) chief scientist said in June that this vaccine was probably the world’s leading candidate.
In an indication that demand for products like smartphones will take time to return even after recovery from the pandemic is achieved, Counterpoint’s early data for June suggest smartphone sell-in remained depressed in China, down almost 10% YoY. This despite China being largely free from many of the fears and restrictions dogging other global markets. As if to underscore the this anomaly, shipments to other regions including North America and Europe have bounced back to similar or even better levels than a year ago despite more severe and long-lasting restrictions caused by the pandemic. How sustained these will be in the face of growing unease at the situation in North America and renewed flare-ups in parts of Europe, remains to be seen.
Elsewhere in the smartphone market, a Reuters report said on Monday that Foxconn was planning to invest up to $1 billion to expand a factory in southern India where it assembles Apple iPhones. The report lists COVID-19 as one of the reasons for the “shift” from China to India.
The work-from-home (WFH) segment continues to attract corporate attention. India’s Bharti Airtel and Verizon Communications Inc’s BlueJeans have come together to launch a business-focused video conferencing tool. Airtel BlueJeans will be free for three months and store its data in India, according to Bharti Airtel CEO (India and South Asia) Gopal Vittal.
Google said on Wednesday that Gmail’s business customers would now be able to edit documents without leaving the e-mail service. The company has been eyeing for long the segment dominated by Microsoft Office.
With WFH, there is another activity that has increased at some homes due to COVID-19. The United Kingdom saw an unexpected rise in its June inflation, thanks in part to the rising prices of gaming consoles.
As testing is stepped up in emerging economies and hitherto undetected cases enter the official records, the order is changing in the charts tracking the pandemic. On Monday, India overtook Russia to become the country with the world’s third-highest number of COVID-19 cases at around 700,000. The United States (3,000,000+) and Brazil (1,700,000+) take the first and second spots. Globally, the total cases crossed the 12-million mark on Thursday.
A study by researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) [find here] predicts that India will hit 287,000 cases per day by early 2021 if no vaccine or medicine is developed by then.
A glimmer of hope came from Mumbai’s Dharavi, Asia’s largest slum, on Tuesday when it reported just one fresh case. Though the number went up to three on Wednesday, it goes far to prove that if authorities get going there is no mountain that can’t be scaled.
Elsewhere, US top infectious diseases expert Anthony Fauci has warned that the country is still “knee-deep” in its first wave of infections and that the number of cases had never reached a satisfactory baseline before the current resurgence.
However, a starker piece of information came from the World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday, which admitted to an “emerging evidence” that COVID-19 could spread by air beyond the two-metre distance that the global body had been asking people to maintain. The WHO is expecting results in around 10 days from the clinical trials it is conducting for possible drugs to be used for treatment of COVID-19 patients.
The weakness in the global economy due to the pandemic is expected to reflect in the Q2 numbers (we could as well call it the ‘Covid quarter’) put out by the companies as the earnings season gets underway. But the companies catering to the work-from-home (WFH) economy that COVID-19 has given rise to are set to beat the trend. On Tuesday, Samsung Electronics forecast a 23% rise in its second-quarter operating profit, thanks to the increasing chip sales to data centres. The good numbers from this segment were able to offset weak demand for Samsung’s other products, like smartphones.
In the Philippines, broadband service provider Converge ICT Solutions on Friday filed for an IPO of around $725 million on the local bourse, riding the increase in demand for broadband from the WFH and e-commerce segments.
In Africa, Loon, an arm of Google’s parent Alphabet, on Wednesday started offering the world’s first commercial 4G internet using balloons to villagers in Kenya’s remote regions. The floating base stations cover about a hundred times the area of a traditional cellphone tower. The company admits it is getting more enquiries about this service from operators and governments ever since the pandemic started.
The US and Brazil continue to vie for the lead in ‘most daily cases’. While Brazil has been on a steadily increasing trend, the US had seemed to be getting the outbreak under control. This was the case until lockdowns started to be eased in mid-May. In states that had been relatively lightly hit, the virus immediately flared-up, even while previously badly hit areas, like New York, continued to moderate. Now the trend is accelerating and the US is recording new record daily highs. On a weekly granularity that smooths some of the daily fluctuations, the US is now recording an average case count of more than double the level in mid-June.
Brazil is the worst representative of a broader outbreak in Latin America, with most countries in the region suffering significant impacts from the virus.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) predicts that Latin American economies will suffer most among all global regions; it expects the region’s economy to shrink by 9.4% this year. It’s outlook for 2021 is for only a moderate recovery. Latin America has endured a number of years of below par economic growth, but the only time in recent history that has seen a economic contraction on the level currently being forecast, was in the early 1980s. Then, the convulsions caused by several countries defaulting on their foreign debts, caused widespread political upheavals.
The consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic on the personal finances of individuals across the region will potentially lead to increased anger at the poor handling of the viral outbreak; Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil being the most egregious case. The anger may then lead to changes in leadership, although elections are not due in Brazil and Mexico for several years. Either way, the outlook for the region is bleak. For more detail on Counterpoint’s forecast for the mobile device markets in Latin America, please contact us.
Other countries and regions causing concern include South Africa and India. South Africa, like India, had imposed a strict lockdown. It has now started to ease the restrictions, but the outbreak is responding by showing sharp increases.
India is showing a similar pattern – putting a strain on its already overburdened health system. India has the fourth largest number of cases globally – closing in on Russia’s number; though we believe Russia’s official case number is highly manipulated.
As we have been highlighting for several weeks, Latin America and particularly Brazil, has become the epicenter of the COVID-19 outbreak. The USA too is experiencing a sharp rise in cases. The data in the following chart shows the sum of new daily cases. It is unsmoothed hence the rapid oscillations day to day, but the trajectory is clear. Europe, which was the center of the pandemic in March and early April, has largely brought the outbreak under control, although the level of control is fragile and likely to suffer some recurrences over the coming weeks.
The USA was the next epicenter – with New York state a particular concern. However the USA tried to move quickly towards reopening and, in some states, had not fully locked down in the first place. These states are now seeing rapid increases in the viral outbreak.
But even the USA is being overtaken by Brazil in terms of daily new cases and the wider Latin America region seeing a large spike in cases, with 18th June recording a new daily high for any region with almost 85,000 new cases. However, as we’ve said from the outset, the level of testing is likely insufficient to reveal the true extent of the outbreak.
Daily new cases in India are also on the rise. For several weeks, the number of official new cases seemed to be oddly consistent day after day. However that trend has now broken to the upside – with an average of over 15,000 daily new cases in the last week, compared to fewer than 10,000 in the first week of June.
The US and India are two of the three largest smartphone markets globally. In both countries lockdowns are easing and we’re seeing the smartphone markets returning to growth. But both markets are at risk of renewed restrictions on freedom of movement, though returns to full lockdowns remains unlikely.
Jobless claims likely to surge
Many of the financial support packages implemented to help companies furlough workers are likely to come to an end over the coming weeks and months. These schemes served to forestall widespread redundancies in many countries. As these financial props come to an end, it will inevitably lead to a sharp rise in redundancies as companies seek to align their cost bases to much lower revenue run rates.
The US had few such packages which led to the sharp rise in jobless claims over the last two months. This has continued with an additional almost 1.5 million new claims in the last week. The unemployment rate in the US is running at over 13%. While some employers have started hiring again, others are continuing to make layoffs at roughly the same rate.
Now, we expect the waves of redundancies seen in the US to start occurring in other countries. Qantas, the Australian airline has announced 6000 lay-offs – adding to 10s of thousands of other travel-related job cuts.
Unemployment is usually a lagging indicator in recessionary times. Given the severity of the economic downturn caused by coronavirus, the response of the unemployment rate may be much sharper than we’ve seen in previous recessions. Unemployment always impacts consumer confidence and will likely therefore dampen any recovery in sales as lockdowns continue to ease.
China is trying to contain a flare up of new cases in Beijing – which has caused a partial tightening of restrictions in some areas of the city. This is raising concerns about the potential for a second wave of infections. However the first wave is still gathering pace in most of the world.
The total number of official cases has risen by almost exactly one million in the last week, with Brazil on course to surpass 1 million cases within a few days. This is very likely a gross underestimation of the actual situation in Brazil following President Bolsonaro’s calamitous handling of the outbreak.
Beyond Brazil, which is now the new epicenter of the outbreak, we’re seeing significant increases in cases in several states in the USA that had moved away from lockdowns around the middle of May. States seeing record daily increases in infections include Florida, Arizona, Texas, Oklahoma, Nevada and Oregon. After bringing its rate of infection growth down from its peak, the US has settled into a pattern of averaging over 20,000 new cases per day – while there are fluctuations on a day to day basis, taken over a period of seven days, the trend is flat.
India, which is also relaxing its lockdowns, is now seeing new cases moving higher, although the official statistics for India still look strange with reported daily new cases within a very tight range. This may simply be a function of the availability of testing, rather than a specific effort to manipulate the statistics, such as we have seen in Russia. But this notwithstanding, the trend in India is upward. This is also the case in neighbouring Pakistan and Bangladesh. Indonesia has also seen its highest level of new daily cases in the last few days.
Many politicians have contracted COVID-19 over the last few months – notably the UK prime minister, Boris Johnson. There are now several more senior politicians either with confirmed infections or self-isolating. These include the president of Argentina – a country that has seen several cases among politicians. The president of Honduras has been admitted to hospital with pneumonia linked to coronavirus. And in central Asia, the national leader of Kazakhstan has tested positive for the virus.
With infection levels continuing to climb in many markets around the world, should we therefore expect the imposition of new restrictions on movement and the closure of shops again? We currently think that this is unlikely. Countries have to balance the need to protect the public with the pressing economic reality that businesses cannot return to any kind of normalcy with lockdowns in place, crippling output and constraining wages or preventing people from earning at all. This is especially acute among informal workers that make up the majority of workforces in many emerging economies. The threat from malnutrition and other diseases of poverty is likely greater than from COVID-19 itself. The new normal may be having to live with COVID-19 as a constant threat, or frequent feature of the disease landscape of the world.
The USA has surpassed 2 million confirmed cases. A grim statistic, but at the population level it is not worse than several other countries. As the US eases its lockdown measures across the nation, we are monitoring the viral response. The US is off its highs of daily new cases – seen in late April, but the rate of infection has not slowed much for several weeks and continues to run at around 20,000 new cases per day.
Brazil stopped reporting official case numbers and deaths last weekend. But its supreme court has ordered the restoration of reporting. It’s not a surprise that the Brazilian government wanted to supress the information, because it is so bad. Brazil has cemented its position as the second worst affected country after the USA. The real infection rate in Brazil is likely far higher – and could exceed that of the USA, based on analysis from the University of Pelotas.
However Brazil is not the only country seeing cases rise. Mexico has reported its highest daily rise in cases within the last few days. Also of concern is India, which had observed one of the world’s most severe lockdowns. However, it is progressively easing the lockdowns despite a high levels of viral transmission in the country. Like Brazil, India has limited capacity for testing, so the official figures likely under-represent the true picture of infection levels in the country. The data from India is also strange in that the total of daily new cases has been consistent, a few cases below 10,000 for five days in a row. This looks suspiciously like data is being manipulated. Similar patterns were seen in Russia, which has been manipulating its data.
Irrespective of individual country anomalies, the pattern of new daily cases is far from flattening, it is actually getting steeper; every day since May 28th has seen more than 100,000 new daily cases globally.
Economic Impact
The impacts, both direct and indirect, are seen in economic data that continues to show the world slipping into a deep recession. The OECD published its forecast earlier this week and it makes for sobering reading. The OECD has outlined two scenarios – the first being a deep recession followed by a slow return to growth – a so-called U-shaped recovery. The second scenario factors-in the potential impact of second wave of coronavirus infections, that may emerge in the latter part of 2020 and in to 2021; fall and winter in the Northern hemisphere.
Despite the dire economic data, we continue to believe the smartphone market is relatively resilient compared to many industries. Consumers rely heavily on their mobile devices for information and entertainment, however they may delay upgrading to a new model when economic uncertainty is high. This is most likely to disproportionately impact low-end devices – those favored by consumers on marginal incomes – as they are the ones most likely to find their jobs impacted by the economic downturn.
Some updates from companies in the smartphone supply chain indicate less negative outlooks than many fear. Some of this is likely due to supply issues resolving, but there are also positive indicators connected with OEM demand as shops reopen. We will continue to monitor these modest green shoots because we expect they will move to more solid indicators of demand recovery.
The focus of the pandemic in Latin America, especially Brazil, continues to gather pace. Recent analysis by the University of Pelotas suggests the real rate of infection is seven times higher than the official rate. We expect the situation in Brazil will continue to worsen for some time as lockdowns have been relatively poorly observed, and even those that have been, are being relaxed. Furthermore, the lack of widespread testing makes it impossible to assess at what stage the infection is at. However, notwithstanding that, if the actual caseload is seven times the official number, it would imply the true figures of those infected in Brazil could be almost double that of the USA.
Unglobalization
The coronavirus pandemic has contributed to a trend we’ve been seeing develop over the past several years – that of a gradual weakening, and in some cases a reversal, of globalization.
China arose to become the workshop of the world over the last three decades. This was especially true in the smartphone ecosystem where the vast majority of smartphones have historically been manufactured in China – mostly in and around Shenzhen.
The China-US trade dispute has accelerated focus on the location of manufacture as some OEMs fear that any escalation in the tussle between the two countries will risk their ability to export goods.
Other self-interested projects, such as Brexit, which is driving a wedge between the UK and the rest of the EU, is further fracturing the fragile stability in global trade.
Now COVID-19 is adding new pressures to international divisions that were already evident. The fact that the Chinese government seemed to supress initial information about the novel coronavirus, potentially missing opportunities to contain it before it became an international problem, has harmed China’s perception around the world. And the extent to which various industry sectors are exposed to fluctuations in supply is more evident now than it was before.
As markets try to gradually reopen following the pandemic, it is unlikely that we return exactly to the way things were before the virus outbreak. Travel to develop new products was curtailed during the worst phase of the outbreak, leading to delays in product launches. It is probable that travel continues to be restricted in various ways. Immigration for work will be increasingly constrained as governments impose limits on visa grants – often in response to those imposed by others.
National governments have tended to become more nationalistic – favouring local players, many of whom they will have had to prop-up with crisis financing – this again will hurt international trade. In India, there has been a backlash against Chinese applications. This has spawned a rise in apps that target Chinese apps for removal from devices, though these apps have themselves run into problems.
In the telecoms sector, Huawei was already under suspicion in the US, Oceania, India and parts of Europe as a vector for Chinese espionage. The US has been lobbying governments to ban Huawei from critical telecoms infrastructure. The responses to COVID-19 and other developments in China, for example the pressure on Hong Kong, are leading governments to look again at previous decisions on Huawei, potentially leading to reducing its potential involvement.
The US is also piling-on pressure by extending its year-old inclusion of Huawei on its ‘entity list’. The new extension will effectively prevent Huawei from using TSMC as a foundry for its Hisilicon-branded chipsets. We write about it in detail here.
And TSMC is making strategic investments to build new fabs in the USA, something it hasn’t done before. This is no knee-jerk reaction however; decisions this big are years in the making.
Nevertheless, it does point to a new trend that we expect to see post-COVID-19 – more diversified supply chains. Instead of relying on few suppliers and geographic locations, we expect manufacturers to develop a broader web of suppliers. The net result will be greater complexity, possibly slower development and slightly higher costs, but more resilience.
Little evidence showing a slowdown in new cases since last week. Over 700,000 new cases have been added to the total in the last seven days. Global official deaths have now exceeded a third of a million. However this total is likely a significant underestimate. For example, the official UK total is 37 thousand deaths. However deaths in which coronavirus was a likely cause of death, but no testing was carried out to confirm it, is closer to 70,000.
Nevertheless, new cases are continuing to moderate in Europe and North America, with the focus shifting more and more to Latin America, as we identified in last week’s update. The latest data shows this trend quite starkly.
Brazil is a large part of this rise, it now ranks second globally in terms of cases – and this despite a lack of testing, so the real number is likely far higher.
Brazil is a populous country, but accounting for the population size the following chart shows that Brazil is now leading in terms of daily new cases.
Our Latin America Senior Analyst, Tina Lu, summed up the situation in Brazil as follows:
Everything is feeling quite chaotic in Brazil. As the number of confirmed cases and deaths in Brazil continues to increase, the not poorly organized lockdown has taken a toll in the economy. The PT, the previous ruling political party, which ruled Brazil for 20 years, is asking for President Bolsonaro’s impeachment, which is bringing increased uncertainty to the country.
Recently, the president, the state governors and some legislators agreed to work together. This truce is providing some measure of political stability that is adding confidence to the market.
Bolsonaro was pushing for states to reopen, but currently Sao Paulo and Rio are both on lockdown until May 31st and Sao Paulo may remain locked-down through June, as this state is seeing one of the highest impacts in Brazil.
Despite the turmoil, most smartphone production facilities are continuing to operate. All major OEMs’ factories are currently in operation, although output is around 40% to 50% of normal levels due to the need to observe strict hygiene and social distancing measures. In addition the market itself is sharply lower.
Despite the situation, OEMs are launching new models. For example, Nokia-HMD launched the brand in Brazil with its Nokia 2.3 model.
Channels are operating as best they can, almost all shopping malls are closed, but many have implemented store pick up. In addition, online sales, with WhatsApp aid, is increasing, especially for large sales ticket items.
Despite the decline in output, stores have sufficient stock to cover the reduced sales; demand having reduced more than supply.
While many countries are now either beginning to ease restrictions or are planning to do so, the number of cases continues to rise. The WHO reported on 20th May, that the highest daily increase was registered on 19th May – over 105,000 new cases. The world has also reached a new milestone in the total number of infections – it has now exceeded five million. While these numbers, as always, must be seen in the context of broader availability of testing, it does indicate that the pandemic is showing no signs of abating.
Of the countries that are faring worst in terms of case numbers and deaths from COVID-19, there is an emerging pattern. Those countries with populist and/or authoritarian leaders tend to do worst (US, Russia, Brazil, UK) while those with progressive, democratic (and often female) leaders are doing best (New Zealand, Germany, South Korea, Finland). It is not within the purview of Counterpoint Research to speculate about politics, but it is relevant if you see any of these markets as being critical to your business fortunes. Countries that are not coping well with the pandemic are likely to experience more severe and prolonged coronavirus outbreaks with the potential for extended periods of disruption.
Poorest Countries Becoming Focus – Latin America Worst Hit
As we have discussed in previous weekly updates, the impact on emerging markets is likely to be felt most strongly. This is because they don’t have healthcare systems capable of responding to a pandemic like the coronavirus. For example, Uganda has more cabinet ministers than critical care beds in hospitals.
Brazil is a case in point. It officially has the third worse outbreak in reported numbers of cases. But testing is not widely available so the real level of infection is likely far higher – quite possibly the highest globally, with some experts in the country estimating at least three million cases.
Brazil has a populist president, Jair Bolsonaro, who has consistently played-down the threat from the disease, urging people to defy attempts by Brazilian state authorities to maintain lockdowns and social distancing measures. Brazil has lost two health ministers since the start of the outbreak – both in disagreements with Mr Bolsonaro.
Reports from Manaus, which is the biggest city in the Amazonas region, suggest that the healthcare system has been completely overrun. They also show the use of mass graves as the conventional burial processes are unable to cope.
Mexico is also experiencing a rise in the level of infections, even as it begins to relax lockdowns in some municipalities. Like many emerging countries the level of testing is low, so the real situation is difficult to assess with any confidence.
Peru is another country in Latin America that has experienced a severe outbreak. Testing of stallholders in a market in the capital Lima, showed that almost 80% were infected. And this despite Peru otherwise applying relatively sound quarantine measures. It is thought that public produce markets across the Latin America region have become significant vectors for viral spread.
In our revised handset forecast, Latin America is notable because we expect it to suffer the most significant downturn of all the world’s regions. This is because the economies were already fragile and because online channels are underdeveloped relative to many other regions. In most Latin American countries, mobile handsets are not regarded as essential items and are thus unable to be sold. If you would like more details of our regularly updated forecasts, please contact your Counterpoint representative, or contact info@counterpointresearch.com.
Many people are impatient to be out of lockdown. This is understandable. Lives and businesses have been put on hold. The economic disruption is likely to be long-lasting and profound.
And the straightforward facts are that even in the most heavily impacted countries very few people have actually contracted COVID-19. This means there remains a large percentage of the population that has had no contact with the virus and has not developed immunity. So countries are therefore vulnerable to new spikes in infections, such as has been seen recently in South Korea. A vaccine, should one even be possible, is unlikely to be available widely until late 2021. So, what should we do until then?
The disease is potentially deadly. But the vast majority of people who catch it, recover without issue. And many never knew they even had it in the first place as they were asymptomatic. Until broad scale population testing is undertaken, we won’t know for sure the exact mortality rates. However based on current data, COVID-19 has a mortality rate of between 0.5% and 1%. At 1% it would be 10x deadlier than seasonal flu. But this still means that even among those that do contract the disease, only a small number will become seriously ill. For most it is a mild disease with no long-lasting impact.
Policy Models
Policy responses by governments are based on modelling the direct impacts of COVID-19 – but not other impacts to the well-being of the economy or society. For example the mental health impacts of being made redundant or of businesses going bankrupt.
The most common policy response has been a lockdown. In most cases this is done to reduce the pool of people susceptible to infection, lowering the transmission rate and easing pressure on stressed healthcare systems. But what has been the impact of different policy responses?
Sweden did not implement a severe lockdown. It essentially asked the population to apply common-sense, to not gather in large numbers and to practice social distancing as far as possible. Its outbreak, as illustrated on the following chart, has not been significantly different than other countries that did implement more severe restrictions.
We expect that governments will be forced to continue gradually lifting the lockdowns despite the potential for infection levels to return to a pattern of growth. US states are starting to reopen. This despite the fact that, outside of New York State, infection rates were not consistently falling.
For countries that have a much higher percentage of casual workers, less developed healthcare systems and little to no social welfare, it is likely the impact of the lockdown on people’s lives and livelihood will be more severe than the disease itself and will be difficult to continue to enforce without draconian measures or the risk of civil unrest.
And it is likely the disease will be here to stay. It will not disappear as abruptly as it appeared. It may undergo mutations over time – most likely to a form that is less lethal.
So life should start to move to some sort of post-COVID state – but what will that look like?
The Hangover
The impacts on our ways of life have been profound and there is much talk of the ‘new normal’. Twitter has told staff that are able to work from home that they may continue to do so, forever. Several other organizations, Facebook and Google for example, have implemented homeworking for some roles until later in the year, but Twitter is the first to make the change effectively permanent. It is unlikely to be the only one. Vodafone, in its results presentation highlighted that 90% of its European-based staff had switched to home working. It said that productivity had not been significantly impacted, though it did note that staff were working longer hours.
Changes in many industries are likely to be long lasting. With even a modest increase in the numbers working remotely, the use of digital collaboration tools will increase, commuting levels decline and international travel – for both business and leisure – also likely to be permanently altered. Vodafone said it had seen a dramatic fall in roaming revenue of between 65-70% which is likely to cost it Euro 0.5Bn, although lower churn is leading to savings on connection commissions. It also experienced a rise in SMEs asking for payment delays or suspensions and large enterprises delaying projects.
Retail has seen a strong shift to online channels. There may be some return to offline when restrictions ease, but much of the shift is likely to be permanent. Vodafone said that through March and April it saw a strong shift to digital channels.
Changing Forecasts
We have revised our forecasts for the year to account for more severe impacts. We now expect the smartphone market will be down 10% year over year in 2020 – driven by shifts in replacement rates and the impact of a deep and longer recession. However, we continue to see mobile communications as essential. All our consumer research has highlighted the fundamental role it plays in people’s lives; a smartphone is usually the last thing someone looks at before sleeping and the first on waking. However, for most people, buying a new smartphone is a discretionary purchase and one that can be delayed in the face of economic uncertainty. But it’s not a purchase that can be delayed indefinitely. This means the market for smartphones is likely more resilient than many others, but it is not immune from the impact of the current economic turmoil. For more details on our forecasts, please contact us directly.
More financial results have confirmed the picture that was emerging from early reports. The impact of the coronavirus is hitting all companies but with wildly different levels of severity. This will play out as countries move towards a relaxation of the most severe levels of lockdown. The focus now shifts to the shape of the economic recovery.
Economic activity rebounded in China quite quickly, but remains at a reduced level compared to where it would otherwise have been at this time of year. The initial rebound looked promising – an expectation that businesses would get back to pre-coronavirus levels. But this has not fully happened. Much of daily life remains curtailed – fewer people are eating at restaurants, using public transport, visiting shopping malls. As we consider countries that are behind China in the progress of the disease’s development and that were harder hit, for example Europe and the USA, what can we expect?
Europe
Countries across the region are now moving toward easing the most severe restrictions. Germany, the EU’s largest economy, started to allow small shops, hardware stores and car dealerships to reopen in late April. Restaurants and hotels can reopen from May 9th. Even the Bundesliga football season can resume from late May – albeit with matches played in empty stadiums. Large gatherings may be permitted from September provided there’s no resurgence in the levels of infection.
Italy allowed manufacturing and construction to resume earlier this week. Shops will be allowed to reopen from mid-month. Schools will not resume until September.
France is allowing some stores to reopen from May 11th, but people are being encouraged to continue working from home until at least June.
Spain is extending its state of emergency through May 23rd, though it is allowing people outside to take exercise.
The UK is reviewing its options and will make announcements at the weekend. It is expected to introduce a phased relaxing of the lockdown.
USA
There is a patchwork of different approaches to relaxing stay-at-home orders across different US states. The US administration is anxious to get the country back to work as jobless claims in the last seven weeks have exceeded 30 million.
India
India has extended its lockdown until at least May 21st. It has also introduced three zones to identify the most and least affected areas, with greater relaxations allowed in the so-called green and orange zones. However the red zones include the major economic centers such as New Delhi, Mumbai and Bangalore.
For the above markets, we expect some level of normalcy will have been reached by June – with most stores open and people starting to return to offices, though we do not expect a full move away from increased levels of remote and home working, perhaps ever.
This is unlikely to be a smooth resumption of economic activity. There is a high chance of new spikes in infection – especially if measures to maintain physical distancing – are not observed. This can lead to the R0 or reproduction number exceeding 1.
Our regular chart of the rolling seven day average of new cases across several important markets highlights several concerning points:
V, U or W shaped recovery?
That the world is in the grip of a recession is not in doubt. The question is what does the future hold in general and what does this imply for the technology sector in particular?
Economic forecasters are wrestling with the data. The most likely outcome for the global economy in the first quarter was a year over year contraction of around 1.3%. The US is thought to be running at around 12% lower than it was a year ago. Goldman Sachs estimates that the impact of a severe lockdown, such as applied in Italy, leads to a GDP decline of 25%. Even countries that successfully contained the outbreak, such as South Korea can expect a GDP decline of 10%.
Surveys of consumers in several countries suggest that many will not rush to return to pre-coronavirus lifestyles – for example a reluctance to visit bars, restaurants and jump on aeroplanes. But as we noted in last week’s update, spending on streaming services, gaming, online retail etc, has been holding up. So any recovery will have a different complexion than the economy before the coronavirus outbreak.
However, governments will not be able to prop-up ailing companies and furloughed employees indefinitely. This will likely lead to a rise in companies going bankrupt and employees, currently being kept in a state of suspended animation, being made redundant. This suggests the rate of unemployment in many countries will trend down or, at best, flat for many months. Unemployment is normally a lagging indicator in ‘normal’ recessions. This one is far from normal, unemployment has immediately spiked higher. Some of the casual workers that were quickly laid off, may be able to find new positions as economies rebound, but salaried worker unemployment is likely to get progressively worse for months to come – exacerbating already poor levels of consumer confidence.
The indicators all point to a lengthy period of reduced economic activity – so a U-shaped recovery is more likely than V-shaped. And any re-emergence of coronavirus infections either later in 2020 or in early 2021, will almost certainly cause a second dip – producing a potentially even more destructive W-shaped economic pattern.
Since last week, we’ve now had many more companies reporting results for 1Q as well as giving their assessments of what the future holds. Companies rarely have perfect visibility of their downstream markets, and even if they do, take care not to over or under play the risks for fear of being penalized by the financial markets. But much as a school of fish or flock of birds simultaneously change direction, insights can be gleaned by listening to their collective voice. And what we hear is: the first quarter wasn’t so bad, the second quarter will be worse. The outlook for the year is unclear, but the nearest analogue we have is the 2008/9 financial crisis, so until greater clarity emerges, we will use that as our guide.
Economic tide recedes
In addition, we’ve had initial GDP numbers from several countries – notably the USA that posted a fall of 4.8%, its largest contraction since the financial crisis of 2008, an end to the longest period of expansion in its history, and likely the first taste of a more severe downturn in the second quarter. The US has also now recorded 30 million jobless claims in the last six weeks.
The US GDP number comes on the heels of China’s official GDP statistics – a drop of 6.8% – its first contraction in GDP for four decades. And although China’s economy is now gradually moving forward again, its GDP outlook for the year will be little better than 1% growth, in the best case.
The COVID-19 wildfire continues to rage
An update on the COVID-19 numbers. Several grim milestones have been reached this week. The world passed 3 million confirmed cases, the US alone accounting for almost a third of them and its total number of deaths, as has been widely reported, has exceeded the number of US service personnel killed in the Vietnam War. However it’s European countries that have the highest number of cases and deaths per 1000 population. But the number of confirmed cases is not the same as the real total number of cases because it is a function of the level of testing. Many emerging countries do not have the facilities to test widely, so the official numbers likely underplay the impact in many countries. This fact will become more and more apparent over the coming weeks and months.
Among the countries that have been hardest hit so far, the picture continues to improve. South Korea that was hit early, but instituted rigorous levels of testing, and tracking and tracing, has reported no new cases on 30th April; it’s new case load has been hovering at around 10 per day for several weeks. Even countries that had severe outbreaks, such as Spain, are managing to contain the spread of the disease through strict lockdown and physical distancing measures. This is leading to the cautious restarts of grounded economies, the phased opening of schools, and efforts to return to some semblance of normality. Some US states have been jumping ahead, even while the outbreak still rages. The danger of relaxing the lockdown too soon, will be new spikes in infections. Let’s see.
Early Results
As the Q1 earnings season progresses, we’re seeing the impact of the virus on companies financial results and forward guidance, if given.
Sectors hardest hit include those involved in travel, hospitality and tourism, offline retail of non-essentials, automotive and oil. Those actually benefiting include grocery retailers, online retail specialists and software and service companies supporting remote access and working. Telecom operators and internet companies that have mixed revenue sources not overly reliant on advertising, are generally holding up, though the pattern of the businesses is changing. And the 5G rollout continues, with a few hiccups, so infrastructure players are reporting respectable results. A selected few companies highlight the trends:
Qualcomm
Reported earnings yesterday. Given its broad exposure to the mobile communications market, it should be indicative of the general health of the sector. It indicated that the initial impact of the coronavirus outbreak was around a 20% fall in handset sales – mainly from China (see our analysis of the market here). Qualcomm expects this to deepen to a 30% fall in the second quarter, as the impact of the outbreak ripples across the globe. However its overall outlook for the year, is for around a 10% annual decline. It nevertheless continues to hold its forecast for 5G devices for the year – though its forecasts covers a wide range (175m to 225m).
Apple
Apple reported iPhone volumes were 7% lower y/y in the first quarter. It started the quarter strongly, before the coronavirus hit the Chinese supply chain and consumer demand. Apple now has a much more diversified revenue base than it did a few years ago, so benefited from more people accessing its digital life services and adding wearable devices to their personal portfolio of Apple devices. And while Mac and iPad volumes were down, many of the buyers were new to the products. More detailed analysis here.
Texas Instruments
TI has exposure to many industries – so provides a broader snapshot of developments. Its results and commentary highlighted the nuances that are characterising the impact of the coronavirus-driven downturn. It reported broadly flat sequential revenues, down a few percent y/y. It said March orders had rebounded following the China New Year extended shutdown, but this surge in orders had started to evaporate into April. It is, nevertheless, continuing to build inventory, speculating that the market may prove to be more resilient, while expecting around a 20% drop in 2Q. TI further said it is basing assumptions on the 2008/9 financial crisis – in the absence of anything better to work with. Management highlighted the snapback in demand in 2009 as the reason it is building inventory in the second quarter.
Another chip vendor with a broad customer base, Microchip, also saw March orders rebound. It is also assuming a pattern similar to 2008/9, but unlike TI, Microchip is trimming its costs.
Intel has a narrower customer base. Its first quarter benefited from stronger sales of notebook PCs and for datacenters – especially from cloud providers. While its business looked strong, it maintained a cautious outlook given the economic conditions, and pulled back from guiding for the year.
Microsoft
Microsoft is benefiting from the massive rise in remote and home working. It reported that in a single day in March, its system hosted over 200 million meeting participants generating over 4 billion meeting minutes (I have been in meetings that felt that long). It’s also benefiting from the rise in gaming; with nearly 90 million active users of Xbox Live. Xbox Game Pass has more than 10 million subscribers. Its Windows OEM, Surface and gaming revenue increases were enough to more than offset declines in ad-driven search.
Facebook and other social media platforms, have seen surging use during the last few weeks as locked-down consumers turn to platforms like Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram and Messenger to stay in touch and assuage boredom. It has surpassed 3 billion people using at least one of its services. The surging use, though, is coincident with falling advertising revenues and falling advertising rates, as advertisers seek to cut costs as their industries are directly impacted (travel, entertainment) and channels to market are closed for others (offline retail).
Google’s parent Alphabet reported similar patterns in ad revenues, though Google is benefiting from stronger cloud computing revenues; its business is more diversified than during the 2008/9 downturn.
Operators – holding us together
The importance of high quality, high capacity, resilient networks has never been more starkly shown than now. It’s testament to the work that telecom providers do that they are able to flex to the increased demand with barely anyone noticing. With most operator stores closed, sales of mobile phones are lower, but this also means churn has trended lower, so acquisition costs have not weighed on the financials. However, with many consumers and businesses using fixed-price plans, increasing usage does not necessarily translate to substantially higher revenue. Two operators from different parts of the world illustrate these trends:
Orange – the France-based operator with shares in operators in Europe, Middle East and Africa, saw first quarter sales up 2% – with decent performances across its properties apart from Spain – but here it was more competition than coronavirus that impacted its progress.
America Movil – one of Latin America’s largest operators, also saw a 2% improvement in sales in Q1. It has seen many of its stores close amid tight lockdowns across the region. But it reported that most sources of revenue were higher. However, the second quarter will be tougher because most of the first quarter was unaffected – AMX’s outlook for the second quarter and rest of 2020 is more downbeat as it expects a severe economic pullback to hurt demand.
Offline retail battered, online strongly up
Grocery retailers – both online and offline are having a good crisis. But most offline retailers are faring badly. In the tech sector, results from the UK’s Dixons Carphone, which includes the mobile retailer Carphone Warehouse provide a good illustration.
Immediately prior to the coronavirus outbreak, Dixons Carphone announced it was closing over 500 of its Carphone Warehouse stores and moving to a store-in-store model with its large Currys-PCWorld consumer electronics stores. The viral outbreak accelerated the Carphone Warehouse store closures and forced the temporary closure of Currys-PCWorld offline stores as well. However, in the latter part of March and into April, the company has seen a 166% increase in online sales – with the early emphasis on homeworking products – PCs, printers — then food preparation and storage products. More recent sales have emphasized health and fitness. It says that the rising online sales have replaced around two-thirds of the missing offline sales.
Automotive – a car crash
Auto sales have started to rebound from low levels in China during February; Nissan is the latest company to report encouraging signs. However, the broader sector continues to struggle across Europe and the US. The current consensus from car companies is an expectation of a 20% reduction for the full year, though some are talking of current sales being only 20% of what they would normally expect. The problem for the car companies is that the pandemic is coming amid the biggest ever transition for the industry – from internal combustion engine to electric drive trains. This transition alone was an existential threat for many car companies; sales of ICE cars are relatively profitable – electric cars are not. That profit from ICE car sales was needed to fund the colossal investment needed to shift to electric cars. With near-term sales mortally wounded, the investment outlook, which was already challenging, has become even cloudier.
While the countries around the world start to consider their next steps – furthering lockdowns or easing them – companies are now reporting results from the first quarter. These provide an indication as to the likely impact for second quarter as most economic activity was seriously impacted only in March and will likely deepen before, hopefully, recovering by mid-year.
Economic pressure mounts
Oil prices are often viewed as an important economic indicator. Indeed, during the early 2000s, as China’s economy grew along with many other emerging markets – the so-called BRIC economies – the oil price rose as demand for the commodity increased, reaching a peak of $146 per barrel in 2008, just before the last recession.
Currently, Brent Crude is hovering around $22 per barrel, off its lows but still at levels not seen for decades. Oil is not a particularly good economic indicator, because it is subject to the vagaries of politically motivated variations in supply. However, the current low price shows that the market has little confidence in the global economy, suggesting we’re likely in for an extended, deep, recession.
Unemployment is a better economic indicator, but one that typically lags in periods of recession. But the coronavirus is causing an atypical economic situation. Millions of workers across the developed and emerging economies are out of work. Around 26 million workers have filed new unemployment claims in the US in the last few weeks, more than 15% of the workforce.
In emerging economies, the situation for millions of casual workers is bleak. In countries including India, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Philippines, over 70% of workers are in the informal economy with most unable to work during the lockdown, but with government support patchy or non-existent.
Lack of remittances
For many emerging economies, remittances from citizens working abroad, form a significant portion of the economy – especially for poor families. Many of these emigrants work manual jobs in the hospitality, transport and building sectors – all of which are working at reduced levels, or not at all, which is causing the flow of remittances to dry-up – heaping further stress on already weakened economies.
Low income, little chance
Even in developed countries, the impact of coronavirus is falling disproportionately on the poorer segments of society. Research by a team of economists that interviewed 4,000 US workers in late March, showed that 16% had already lost their job and among the 20% least able to work from home, 40% had lost their jobs. Conversely, those with relatively high incomes, above $60,000 per year, had seen relatively little impact on their employment status.
These data feed through into how spending on products like smartphones is likely to respond to the coronavirus crisis. For many consumers, high cost discretionary purchases are being put on hold. For the smartphone market this means longer replacement cycles. However, buyers of high-end and premium smartphones are the ones least likely to be directly affected by the economic meltdown. As they come to terms with the new normal, their levels of anxiety are likely to diminish, confidence rise and we therefore expect purchasing of essential technology products, which smartphones are, to rebound. The short term however, will be characterised by a short, sharp, slowdown. And products typically purchased by those on the margins of the economy, prepaid, low-end smartphones and feature phones, are likely to be disproportionately more impacted, though this may be offset by people opting for cheaper alternatives. In Europe, phones for elders – mostly feature phones – have seen an uptick in sales as families provision loved ones with every available means to remain in contact at a time when physical distancing is required.
Results
As companies’ 1Q 20 results are starting to be reported, the impact of the lockdowns is becoming clearer. European car sales were down by more than half in March compared to 2019; March is usually a strong month for sales. February sales, by comparison, were flat y/y. Nevertheless, after enduring several weeks of lockdown, several car manufacturers, including Daimler, VW and Renault are starting to reopen plants in Europe.
AT&T reported decent results, but sales of phones were down sharply in the quarter.
LG Display reported a sharp contraction in sales, citing weak demand for TVs and smartphones, though demand for monitors, laptops and tablet devices was improving, to support increased remote and home working.
Building 5G Networks – a burning issue
Problems continue in the UK and other markets where conspiracists are drawing a link between 5G and the spread of coronavirus. This absurd notion has led to several base stations (the vandals have little idea which are and are not 5G) being set on fire. Government bodies and telcos are appealing for sense to prevail, but conspiracists are deeply distrustful of the authorities and continue to spread the rumors via social media.
In addition to vandalizing base stations, telecom engineers have been harassed and threatened with physical harm, even when not actually working on 5G infrastructure.
The combined impacts of this, together with the needs for social distancing and the difficulties in obtaining planning approvals during lockdowns, is slowing network rollouts.
Impact of telecoms
Although challenges are mounting, most telcos and ISPs are delivering resilient services in the face of substantially increased demand for services. For example, US telcos are reporting:
Impact on other tech
Gaming is one of the sectors seeing the greatest surge in use as people turn to gaming in increased number to escape the boredom and anxiety caused by extended lockdowns. However game developers are finding the new remote working mode is increasing the challenge of readying new titles for release. While much of the coding can be, and has been, done remotely, the coordination costs are sharply higher when teams are no longer collocated. This may delay the launch of some new titles this spring.
How to exit lockdown
With the numbers of new daily cases in many markets slowing, or at least flattening, governments are trying to balance their need to get their economies rolling again with the fear that opening up too quickly will cause a surge in new cases. This fear is well-founded. Research from China, Korea and Italy suggests that people that previously had COVID-19 continue to test positive for the virus even a month after the symptoms are gone. And even in the most badly affected countries, only a tiny proportion of the population has been infected, meaning that if those that have recovered from the disease do have immunity, this will apply to very few people in total.
Nevertheless, various countries are cautiously opening up. Spain has allowed some construction and manufacturing workers to return to work. In Germany, shops up to 800 square meters in size and car dealers are being allowed to open. However France has extended its lockdown into May – as has India.
Several US states are discussing how to reopen their economies – some under pressure from protesters. The states include New York, the worst hit in the US, and California.
Contact Tracing by Phone
One of the tools that will enable economies to reopen, is the ability to test widely and then track and trace those that may have had contact with an infected person. Apple and Google have taken the unprecedented step of aligning their Bluetooth protocols for iOS and Android. This will allow app developers to use the capability to develop apps capable of alerting phone users that they may have been in close proximity with someone who became ill with coronavirus. The system uses the Bluetooth LE protocol. When an appropriate app is installed, the smartphone continuously broadcasts a unique code while simultaneously listening to codes from other phones in the vicinity; Bluetooth LE’s range is up to 9 meters. Phones will create records of which codes it has ‘heard’. Should a user of the app subsequently fall ill and test positive for COVID-19, the code of the infected person’s phone will be broadcast, allowing all phones with the app to cross match if it was in close proximity with that of the infected person.
This could prove an excellent way to tighten the contact tracking and tracing process, which is notoriously difficult, resource intensive and time consuming. However, it both requires that a high number of smartphone owners install the app – ideally significantly more 50% of the population – and that there is widespread and easily accessible testing, which currently only applies to a few countries. Markets where similar initiatives have been tried, for example, Singapore, have not achieved the requisite numbers of app installs despite a relatively compliant population.
A further hurdle is the lack of Bluetooth LE support in many phones, especially feature phones that are still widely used in many emerging markets.
So while the accord between Apple and Google is remarkable, it’s no silver bullet.
The global total of official infections now exceeds 2 million, with the worst affected country, the USA, accounting for over 30% of the total. The real number of infections likely far exceeds the official total; many countries are still unable to test sufficiently large numbers to verify the extent of the disease outbreak.
Nevertheless, for several countries in Europe and the United States, the rate of new daily cases is noticeably slowing. And the rate of slowing in new cases has been sufficient for several European countries to have either already started to lift the most severe restrictions, or start to plan for this to occur. Borders are being reopened gradually, though in Europe, this is partly to admit agricultural workers to harvest crops that would otherwise rot in the fields.
As restrictions are relaxed, there is a strong possibility of further flare ups in infections necessitating a re-tightening of restrictions. And lockdowns continue to be enforced in India and many other markets, with prospects for these to be extended into May.
But while there are positive signs from tracking the path of the disease, the global economy is far from out of the woods. Claims for unemployment support are soaring. The US released new unemployment claims today that exceeded 5 million, meaning the total of new claims for the month have exceeded 20 million.
While some European countries have seen unemployment rates rising, governments across the region are paying up to 80% of employees’ salaries in a variety of furlough schemes. These governments learned from the problems caused by the 2008 global financial crisis, when such schemes weren’t widely deployed. This resulted in several European countries, notably Spain and France, suffering high unemployment rates for up to a decade following the recession. Germany, that did use the furlough scheme following the 2008 recession, recovered more quickly.
Governments that are capable of doing so, are putting in place schemes to support companies and even the self-employed, so that as the coronavirus wildfire passes, green shoots of recovery can quickly be nurtured. But the pattern of recovery, will vary dramatically from sector to sector and even company to company.
The International Labour Organisation says that the sectors facing severe declines in output and therefore a high risk of layoffs or furloughs employ almost 38% of the global workforce, which equates to around 1.25bn people. This implies that even a V-shaped recession will likely be deep. And any U-shaped recession will cause an extended period of misery for many.
Emerging market stress
Capital flight from emerging markets has been acute. This can be seen in the foreign exchange markets where the Mexican Peso, Brazilian Real, Russian Rouble and South African Rand have all depreciated substantially against the US dollar. The slump in world trade and almost complete cessation of tourism is also hitting many emerging markets. So while many of these markets are not feeling acute pain from the impact of the viral outbreak, their economies are under severe strain.
Consolidation in corporate power
Many large companies were in a healthy condition before the outbreak, with ample cash on their balance sheets and limited debt. They will likely be comfortably able to withstand the inferno and come out the other side, not only in a reasonable shape, but finding the landscape less cluttered than before; a consequence of the viral outbreak will be that smaller and weaker firms, are less able to survive. And those that do, will be vulnerable to being acquired. Expect therefore that power will concentrate in the hands of those that already had most of it before the outbreak.
A further consequence is likely to be an acceleration in the diversification of supply chains. Companies that were overly reliant on China were hurt early in the outbreak. But before the coronavirus crisis, we’d already seen companies moving to diversify their manufacturing bases away from China; Vietnam and India are likely to be the biggest beneficiaries.
The rolling seven day average of new daily cases of corona virus show that lock downs and physical distancing do work, though it takes time. They work by reducing the pool of potential people that the virus can infect, which slows the spread and allows authorities a chance to contact-trace and quarantine those that have been infected or that have been in contact with people infected. It is a mammoth task and economically destructive.
The US was slow to implement lockdowns and they’re still not universal across the country. The chart below shows the rolling seven day average of new daily cases for selected countries. A rolling average is used because the data is noisy and the average helps to smooth out anomalies. Previous epicentres in Italy and Spain are trending lower. The UK (including Prime Minister, Boris Johnson) continues an upward trend, though at a slower rate.
The US is, very clearly, still escalating rapidly though the rate of growth is slowing, however this may be more a function of the number of tests being carried out.
China and South Korea continue to offer encouraging pictures with new daily cases in the few 10s and daily life returning to normal, even in Wuhan.
Economics of a pandemic
Our concern is now shifting more and more to the long term economic impact that the pandemic will cause. The world is officially in a global recession as declared by the International Monetary Fund around 10 days ago. However the impacts are likely to be felt differently among the developed and developing countries.
Lockdowns, while effective at slowing the spread of the virus, are economically harmful. In a crisis, perfection is the enemy of the good. We have seen governments rushing to close borders and lockdown cities, while also creating financial lifeboats to help citizens and corporations weather the storm. While many of these measures are good and necessary, the haste with which they’ve been established has left many vulnerable people outside the safety nets.
In rich countries, governments have the capacity to support the economy for months. In developing countries, this is not the case. In India, the government acted with great speed to lockdown the country. But in so doing, it seemed to forget the millions of migrant and casual laborers that make-up a large percentage of the workforce. Many found themselves not only jobless, but also homeless – more or less overnight. With nowhere else to go, and little functioning public transport, many embarked on journeys by foot, for hundreds of kilometres to their home villages. In some cases carrying the virus with them. And many of the world’s poor live in overcrowded conditions with little access to facilities to carry out the mandated regular handwashing.
There are similar cases throughout the developing world. South Africa and Brazil, among many other countries, have implemented lockdowns of varying severity, meaning many migrant and casual workers are out of jobs, but with limited or no savings to fall back on. This puts casual workers in an invidious position, either starve, or try to continue working in some capacity and risk either contracting the virus, the wrath of the authorities, or both.
And the governments of emerging economies are not strong enough to support their populations or corporations during lengthy shutdowns. And worse, capital is fleeing to safe havens – which has meant the US dollar, almost exclusively. The US Federal Reserve is easing access to the dollar for some countries, but this is likely scant comfort.
The US, while rich, is a highly stratified society with a large underclass working low paying jobs, effectively on a casual basis; most American employment contracts have few protections against immediate dismissal. And even those with decent contracts tend not to have access to statutory sick pay. As a result jobless claims have skyrocketed – 16 million new claims in the past three weeks. And those were the ones able to negotiate flaky jobless claims websites that continually crashed under the weight of numbers, or visit overcrowded unemployment offices, running the risk of contracting the infection while doing so.
Rich countries have, nevertheless, created massive cash lifeboats to support companies unable to continue operating at capacity, or, in some cases, at all. Some countries, the UK for example, are also creating support packages for the self-employed – such as builders, plumbers and electricians. These packages should mean that as the countries come out of lockdown they can rapidly resume economic activity at something close to previous levels. The calculus is that a rapid resumption of economic activity will start fiscal flows to start paying-down the massive debts that governments are establishing.
We doubt, however, that the resumption of activity will be smooth across all sectors of the economy. Furthermore, the new ways of working for many may become a new normal, with more people than ever working from home. Companies may be able to reduce the size of office space as they realize that as many as a third of employees can work effectively from home on a near continuous basis.
Sectoral Impacts
We have updated our assessment of sectoral impacts. These are not designed to be read as detailed forecasts, but to guide thinking around which sectors are likely to be hardest hit and which are, conversely gaining in the current situation.
Smartphones: The smartphone market in China saw a sharp hit in January and February but was already recovering before the end of March as supply chains, retail activity, return to normalcy. We expect 2Q to reflect a slight rebound with further slight positives throughout the balance of 2020.
The smartphone market outside China is contracting sharply as retail stores are shuttered leaving online as the principal route to market. The downswing had already started before lockdowns were implemented. It may be as deep as China’s sharp slowdown but will likely last longer. Unlike China, where at least a part of the slow down was supply driven, the rest of world’s contraction is driven more by consumers withholding replacement activity until they get more comfort with the new economic realities of their situation. Assuming the lockdowns ease within a few weeks, the recovery should be strong, though we can expect some consumers to change their spending patterns.
Automotive: The auto sector is likely to be hit hard globally. In the early part of the year Chinese car sales almost halted entirely. And while they are recovering, there is now a mismatch between supply and demand. This pattern is likely elsewhere. In Europe the COVID-19 crisis has also coincided with new and highly restrictive emissions regulations. It is likely part of government stimulus spending will encourage consumers to scrap older, higher polluting cars, in return for cash subsidies.
Hearables: following a modest supply interruption we expect sales of hearables will benefit. Consumers that are self-isolating, working from home and relying more on streamed media will likely seek out high quality audio.
Retail: the impact is nuanced.
Streamed media: Physical isolation causes an uptick in demand for streaming media services especially video and games. Streamed music benefits less as consumers seek sources of news through radio stations or news-based podcasts.
Transport in all forms is hard hit. Airline travel is sharply lower, with many fleets grounded or flying extremely limited schedules. Tourism is also largely halted. The recovery is likely to be long, slow and painful with many companies seeking bailouts from governments.
Telecom: not charted, but we are seeing telecom service use substantially higher. For some mobile operators the reduction in international travel means lucrative roaming revenues are reduced, but more use of hotspots to enable home working means many are using networks more with many users migrating to higher data packages as a result, so a net benefit to operators – both fixed and mobile.
Cashless Payments: cash is being seen as a potential vector for the virus. This is stimulating the faster adoption of digital payment mechanisms across the world, even overcoming fears about the security of some systems.
Big Tech: in general the established tech giants are faring well. Use of cloud resources and over-the-top applications supporting audio and video-conferencing and collaborative remote working are seeing strong upticks in demand. Aside from a few early teething troubles, the services have flexed to accommodate the increased demand effectively underscoring the importance of resilience, quality and capacity.
One additional positive for the tech sector is that governments preoccupied with fighting the impact of the viral pandemic will spend less time scrutinizing M&A. This together with substantial pull-backs in valuations will likely mean a number of new deals will be made through 2020.
The novel coronavirus continues to wreak havoc on daily life around the world, and in an increasing number of countries; 180 have now reported cases. In the past seven days the total number of confirmed cases has doubled again and is still accelerating – with new cases increasing by around 20% per day (75,000 between March 31st and April 1st).
But physical distancing and lockdowns do bring results – Italy’s number of new cases on April 1st was almost the same as the previous day – indicating that it is nearing the top of the new case growth curve and should see a decline in the days to come. However more worrying were spikes in new cases in Spain and France, both countries that had previously seen slowing growth. However, the data is noisy, and a slowing trend is seen in most markets that have been rigorously enforcing lockdowns and physical distancing measures.
Last week we said the US was, ‘almost certain to overtake all other countries..’, it didn’t take long. The US now has a massively higher number of cases than all other countries – almost twice as many as Italy. We indicated our concern about the US when we started keeping this weekly update and this has now been borne out. The fast growth in newly reported cases is partly a function of greatly increased testing, which is now uncovering the extent of the infection. Despite the sharp rise in cases, March manufacturing data from the US was more resilient than feared. But new jobless data shows a massive rise in new claims 6.64 million compared to an expected 4.88 million. That the new number is so much worse than even the most pessimistic forecast highlights that the full extent of the impact remains unclear.
However, while many states in the USA have implemented lock downs, there is still a stark contrast in indicators of activity. For example, two snapshots taken at the same time and at the same scale, from FlightRadar24, show the level of air traffic over the US compared to that over Europe. Pre-COVID you would see comparable levels of air traffic, though the US has always been somewhat higher. But in the midst of the current crisis, we are surprised at the continued level of passenger air traffic in US airspace. While the one over Europe is early evening and that of the US is around 2pm EDT, there is clearly more traffic over the US. Inspection of the flights does show a high proportion of cargo, but many are still passenger flights. By contrast, around 80% of the flights over Western Europe are cargo flights. On April 1st, the Trump administration said it was considering isolating hotspots from flight traffic, but has not yet imposed such as restriction. That said, data shows the number of passengers in the US is dramatically lower. So while many aircraft continue to fly, most are almost empty.
Income and Infection – strongly linked
New York City accounts for almost half the cases in the US. Data released by the city by zip code indicates a strong correlation between median income levels and the number of cases. This is unsurprising as the localities with the lowest incomes see the most overcrowded living conditions, where people have the greatest difficulty in self-isolating. This also gives us concern about fast growing and emerging markets that exhibit similar living conditions.
The Dharavi area of Mumbai is home to around a million people living in extremely high population density, in make-shift housing. The first coronavirus casualty was reported overnight. It is reasonable to expect the number of cases in the area to multiply rapidly. The Indian authorities are enforcing the largest lockdown globally. While official cases remain relatively low in the country, the lack of testing means that real number of cases is likely far higher. We continue to monitor the situation in India with concern as it is now the second largest smartphone market globally and still growing – unlike China and the US. A deep and sustained impact from corona virus will have a profound impact on the global smartphone market.
Indonesia is the world’s fourth most populous country. It has also seen an uptick in infections. While again the official number is low, we also think community infection is likely occurring unseen due to the lack of testing and preparedness. Expect the case rate to move sharply higher in the coming days and weeks.
Brazil has seen a sharp rise in cases. President Bolsonaro has been dismissive of the threat posed by the disease and has been urging Brazilians to return to work. However, most of Brazil’s state governors are defying the government and requiring people to self-distance and remain home. Nevertheless, it is likely that community transmission is underway in Brazil and cases will grow exponentially.
Economic Impacts
The International Monetary Fund declared that the world had officially entered a global recession. Given the scale of reductions in economic activity across multiple sectors, this is not surprising.
Forecasts are being updated as the situation unfolds. Currently, most economists are expecting a contraction in economic growth of around 2% y/y in 2020, which represents a downside swing of some 4.5 percentage points over previous forecasts.
Smartphone Market Impact
We have modelled the most likely impact on the smartphone market based on the mix of factors we have seen so far, and expect to see over the next few months. We have looked at parallels from recent recessions to help guide our thinking. Our conclusion is that we expect to see a sharp contraction as consumers withhold making discretionary purchases during periods of maximum uncertainty. The result is an extension in the replacement cycle. However we expect that extension will be limited to no more than six months. We further expect that the long run average market growth rate will not vary significantly – but the near term growth rates will reflect the slow down and then rebound — a similar pattern to that seen in recent recessions but allowing for the different level of market maturity.
Other Sectors
Automotive remains hard hit. Most production facilities across Europe and North America remain closed. It’s a similar story in India. During the recession in 2008/9 the governments in the US and Europe implemented scrappage schemes to encourage consumers to replace older vehicles and inject spending into the auto sector. Given the strict new emission norms being implemented in Europe, governments in the region are likely considering the potential to gain benefits from newer lower emission vehicles that will go some way to addressing air pollution, while also pushing money into the hard hit auto sector. We are therefore expecting the return of scrappage schemes, perhaps with escalating rebates for the most fuel efficient cars such as full electric.
Subscribing clients can request more detail of our forecasts across a number of sectors including smartphones, IoT, automotive and more.
A week is a long time in politics, and also in this coronavirus outbreak. In the past seven days, the number of confirmed cases has risen by 255,000 and still accelerating – currently by around 50,000 cases per day.
China still has the most cases, but Italy is fast catching up. Italy and Spain have recorded more deaths than China.
Statisticians have observed that the coronavirus outbreak precisely follows mathematical models and it is these that are informing government behaviours once an initial period of denial is overcome. The stages are clear and follow a consistent pattern. This from a former colleague, Dr Timo Partanen:
What about Korea and Japan?
Both countries followed a different pattern, because their strategies were to test and track the epidemic intensively. They didn’t get a long period of 25% daily growth, because they followed every case and isolated all contacts. That cut the “natural growth” towards 10% a day.
And where is the USA?
As a whole it is still in the discovery phase and the numbers are distorted by the lack of tests. Some states have applied tough measures – such as California. But at the country level the growth rate in cases in the last 24 hours was almost exactly 25%. It is still not under control and there is no clear indication of how widely the virus has spread already. For example, in New York testing was expanded properly only last week and it is now undertaking more than 15k tests per day, and is finding 5k cases per day. The federal government is unwilling to impose the most stringent levels of control for fear of impacting the economy more deeply. This will likely mean a longer period of unconstrained growth in cases, unless almost all individual states apply the lockdown in a coordinated fashion. But it is the federal government that controls air traffic, for example.
It is almost certain that the US will overtake all other countries, including China, with the highest total number of cases.
Anomalies in the numbers
Iran is likely far, far worse than official statistics imply. Iran has not imposed a lockdown, so we expect there to be an almost unconstrained spread of the virus among the population. But with little testing and a government that rigorously controls communication, we may never know the true extent.
Russia too is likely to be experiencing a worse outbreak than official numbers suggest. It has established special facilities to deal with the outbreak, but is not reporting its cases freely.
India – the official number of infected is low. But while it is growing relatively quickly (20% in the last 24 hours) the government has moved fast to implement draconian lockdown measures that should slow the spread even if the real level of infection is much higher. The problem for many places in India is that social distancing, in some of the most densely populated areas, will be difficult to sustain for long. India has implemented the fiercest measures of any country. It will be a test case of how to bring the outbreak under control across a vast and populous country.
Impact on the Global Economy
There is a high probability of a global recession occurring in Q2 and Q3 of 2020. Sectors most obviously impacted include travel and tourism, hospitality and entertainment; people are not travelling, eating out or going to the cinema. These sectors employ millions globally and have come to an almost complete stop in many countries.
The stark economic indicators seen in China in February are now being replicated in many other countries, even while China gets back on track.
The disruption to international travel is hurting trade already. Over half of global air freight is carried on passenger aircraft. The image below from FlightRadar24 looks similar to last week’s. But an examination of the aircraft criss-crossing the Atlantic shows that around half are cargo planes. The American Association of Port Authorities, an alliance of ports of the US, Canada, Caribbean and Latin America has warned that cargo volumes during the first quarter are likely to be down 20% y/y. Jobless rates in the US are surging, applications for income support in the UK have jumped.
Governments are acting fast though. The experience of the financial crisis of 2008/9 showed that decisive action helped address the damaging levels of uncertainty. Central banks in Europe, US and in other countries have prepared stimulus packages of staggering magnitude. Yesterday, the US Senate approved a package totalling around $2trn (9% of GDP). The total extra fiscal stimulus announced so far amounts to more than 2% of global GDP – far more than was applied in the wake of the 2008/9 financial crisis.
The stimulus and support packages may help. But consumer uncertainty tends to lead to withholding spending in times of trouble, only returning to previous levels once confidence returns.
Developed countries are fortunate in being sufficiently wealthy that they can afford to support the economy and workers for an extended period. In addition, healthcare systems are well-developed. Poorer countries have a higher proportion of casual workers and patchy healthcare, so the impacts will likely be, proportionally, greater.
Impact on Smartphones and Technology
We have developed new forecasts that are available for subscribing clients. These show a sharp fall in demand, moving in a wave across from China to the west, consistent with the viral spread. Under lockdowns, almost all offline retail activity ceases, though online continues to function.
The smartphone market is resilient; smartphones are perceived by consumers as essential. However, aside from replacing a broken phone, the purchase is usually discretionary and can therefore be delayed, effectively extending the replacement rate. The resulting contraction in the market will likely be short term in nature, we expect it to recover relatively quickly once the worst of the outbreak passes.
Homeworking and social distancing are underscoring how important technology is to keep people connected and entertained. While we see the Coronavirus pandemic as a sharp, short-term negative, we continue to believe the long term impact on the market will be marginal.
Counterpoint will be hosting a webinar to talk through the likely impacts as we see them. Click here to register
While the pandemic escalates in the west and increasingly wreaks havoc on daily life, China and South Korea are starting to get back to normalcy. Early, stringent action by the authorities was effective at containing the outbreak. There is chance of flare-ups but we expect those to be dealt with rapidly. Other countries such as Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore also appear to have been successful in limiting the disease spread. The biggest risk for these nations now is nationals returning home from countries on the fast escalation curve – notably Europe and the USA.
In the last eight days, the number of confirmed cases has risen by almost 100,000. Almost a quarter of these new cases are in Italy, with many more in Spain, France and Germany. The UK has also seen a steep rise in cases, with London the epicentre of its outbreak.
The US continues to give us concern. The country as not been able to test widely, so we continue to believe the official number of confirmed cases massively under represents the true scale of the problem.
India, Russia, and many parts of the Middle East and Africa, and much of Latin America, have either been successful at preventing the virus from spreading or, more likely, are not able to test sufficiently effectively to reveal the true scale of the pandemic.
The bottom-line, is that the picture from Johns Hopkins shown below is just the ‘tip of the iceberg’. The full scale of the disease may not be known for months or even years.
Impact on Commercial Activity
Turmoil continues on stock markets. Central banks are releasing unprecedented funds and instituting quantitative easing, but investors continue to lack confidence as they cannot see an end to the disruption. In this environment only safe haven assets are in demand – recently the US dollar. The price of gold had escalated but sold-off to cover investors’ losses in other asset classes while others opted for the US dollar above all other assets.
Many countries are being progressively locked-down. Italy has been in this state for a couple of week and is being joined by France, which is imposing penalties on citizens straying outside without good reason. Many European countries are closing land borders to prevent foreign citizens from entering. Canada and the US have closed their land border. Brazil has closed its border with Venezuela.
In markets that are locked down, all but essential stores are closed. Online remains active though and has seen strong upswings in activity.
Airlines are reducing flights, with many grounding part or all of their fleets, and temporarily laying off staff.
Travel and tourism, and hospitality more broadly, is hard hit with hotels empty and restaurants and bars being shuttered.
Impact on the smartphone market
Mobile phones are considered a necessity by most people. This means it is a resilient market. Recent parallels include the sub-prime mortgage crisis and subsequent global recession in 2008/9, the tech bubble bursting in 2001 and the impact of SARS in 2002/3. In each case, the market was knocked back but rebounded in the aftermath.
The market has changed since 2009 – it is now much more mature, and in the markets currently most severely impacted, almost everyone has a smartphone. For many consumers, the purchase of new smartphone is a discretionary purchase; they can choose when to buy. The consequence of this has been seen over the last few years in lengthening replacement cycles, which has caused the smartphone market to contract as people hold on to their phones for longer and longer. The immediate impact of the coronavirus pandemic, is that the replacement cycle is likely to stretch still further. But consumers will replace. So while the market will slow down during the worst period of the crisis, it will rebound; we don’t think volume will be lost – just that the pattern of demand will change.
There are two main risks, that could cause a material lowering of our long-term outlook:
There are also mitigating factors:
We are updating our forecasts more frequently during this period. Subscribing clients will receive regularly-revised short-term forecasts that assimilate the latest information.
Impact on other technology markets
Demand for home working equipment and services are sharply higher, displays and headsets, and conferencing services. Access to Microsoft Teams was temporarily impacted earlier this week as thousands of normally office-based workers across Europe tried to access the service from home. More capacity is likely being made available.
Automotive Markets
Car companies are still coping with supply issues arising from the initial outbreak in Hubei Province that caused many parts to go into short supply. These companies are now having to contend with potential shortages of labor, as workers either become sick or have to self-isolate. Several factories in Europe and North America are implementing temporary closures.
We also expect demand for new vehicles to be sharply lower in many markets as car dealerships are closed.
Audio visual equipment and streaming
With higher numbers spending more time at home, demand for streaming entertainment is escalating sharply. This may trickle over into demand for new equipment such as TVs, but big discretionary spends are more likely be deferred. However, demand for hearables is likely to rise as households try to manage the situation of multiple people enjoying their own content without disrupting others. Hearable devices are readily available from online stores.
As we predicted two weeks ago, the WHO has been forced to pronounce the coronavirus a pandemic. It doesn’t change anything much in relation to the likely viral spread, but should help focus the minds of governments that may be reluctant to take the necessary steps to contain the outbreak, or mitigate its worst effects.
Also as we noted last week, the coronavirus infection rate in China is decelerating. This is good news and should allow most factories outside the Hubei province to move back toward normal, seasonal activity levels by the beginning of the second quarter.
In other countries, however, the picture is less positive with more than 25,000 new cases reported in the last week.
The pattern of infection and recovery is becoming clearer. The infection spreads rapidly through a population, reaching a peak and then subsiding almost equally rapidly once there are no new people to infect. By locking down areas and curtailing socializing, the pool of potential virus recipients is reduced, causing the outbreak to moderate more quickly. This is what happened in China. But a rapid lockdown it is not what has happened in Iran, Italy and many other parts of Europe, and the United States. The disease has likely been in the community in these countries for several weeks before being formally identified. Containment measures are belatedly being taken in some countries, Italy for example.
Many Fewer Flights Than Normal Originating and Terminating in Italy
But in most other countries, little is being done to either monitor the virus’ spread, or to prevent it. Angela Merkel, Germany’s Chancellor, has warned that as many as 60-70% of the German population may become infected, if stringent measures are not taken. It is reasonable to assume that this rate of infection would apply to other, similar countries.
The USA is most concerning. Evidence from Seattle suggests the existence of coronavirus in the community as far back as early February, but the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) was not able to effectively test for the virus at that stage and even prevented some research laboratories from reporting their own positive test results. The alarming conclusion is that the reported positive cases in the USA likely massively underrepresent the true picture of infections in the USA.
Stock Shocks
As the potential impact of the virus has become better understood, stock markets have been hit hard, with major indices registering falls in excess of 10%. Some of the falls were also related to a conflict between major oil producers that saw a sharp fall in the price of oil. Nevertheless, money markets are trying to price-in a short sharp shock to the world’s economy with little to guide them on what this will actually look like.
Supply-Driven Downturn
Most recessions have been caused by falls in demand. The most recent one of 2008-9, was triggered by a financial crisis that spilled over into a sharp reduction in demand as banks spiralled into a debt crisis of their own making.
In this case, there is the potential that workers will be prevented from working due to illness or having to isolate themselves at home. If this occurs for a significant proportion of the population at any given time, it will have a short-term negative impact on economic activity – initially from the supply of labor, but then also in demand, as consumers will refrain from buying much beyond core necessities. The shock to the system should be short-lived and likely resolved relatively quickly. We expect a rebound in most economic activity to occur before the year end.
Central banks are continuing to offer support. The Bank of England in the UK has cut interest rates by 50bps in a move that echoes that of the US Federal Reserve, last week. However in a supply-driven crisis these moves are unlikely to do much to stimulate economic activity. Governments are likely to need to support small and medium sized businesses that will inevitably struggle with cash flow problems, and support workers that are forced out of work. The UK government is implementing a raft of measures to support small businesses and the self-employed who may not otherwise be eligible for sickpay.
Impacts beyond the numbers
Rumors have been circulating for several weeks that Apple will delay the launch of the, yet to be named, lower cost iPhone. This is to be the successor of the iPhone SE, built around the same form-factor as the iPhone 8 series (SE2, iPhone 9..?).
Problems with the launch were initially thought to be because initial volume ramps could be delayed due to Foxconn’s inability to start production. Travel restrictions on Apple’s engineers flying to China to supervise pre-production testing might also be a factor. And if all these were not problematic enough, just holding a launch event at this time, is difficult. So we expect Apple to postpone the launch for a few weeks at least. Other smartphone manufacturers are continuing to launch new products however (link to blogs)
The E3 2020 expo in Los Angeles is the latest among more than 250 trade shows to be cancelled or converted to online events.
Outlook
We continue to expect a rapid increase in infections in Europe, USA and many other countries over the next eight to twelve weeks before returning towards normal during 3Q and with an expectation of largely normal levels of economic activity by the year end.
There is cautious optimism that the worst of the outbreak in China is now past. Factories are beginning to ramp up production slowly, though many are still below normal capacity at this time of year. Foxconn said it is running at about half its normal low-season capacity – this equates to about 25% of full capacity. While factories are anxious to ramp-up production, they’re also being careful that labour-intensive work does not rekindle viral outbreaks.
While this is somewhat positive for China, the outlook in the rest of the world is rather more bleak. And the realization of the potential for lasting economic disruption has caused a sharp falls of up to 15% in the value of shares on many stock markets. This has prompted central banks to intervene with support – for example a 50bps cut in interest rates by the US Federal Reserve.
Last week we outlined countries of concern as, South Korea, Japan, Iran, Italy, UK and US. We think these will be good analogues for how the virus is likely to spread more widely.
South Korea has continued to see infection rates escalate – mostly centered around the southern city of Daegu.
Japan is considering delaying the Olympic Games until later in the year, but has not yet cancelled the event.
Iran has the highest number of deaths outside China, but due to efforts by the regime to deny the extent of the outbreak it has likely led to a greater level of infection in the country. The number of deaths do not tally with the reported number of infections, which must be far higher than the official numbers would indicate.
Italy – it is likely that the virus was circulating for several weeks before being fully recognized. This has led to the level of infections seen and also allowed for travellers to take the infection to other countries.
UK – while the number of cases remain low, several people have been diagnosed who have not been to centers of infection or knowingly interacted with those that have. This indicates that containment is likely no longer possible. The UK government has enacted an emergency plan in which the realistic worse case scenario would see up to 20% of the workforce either off-sick or self-isolating.
USA – new cases are emerging at a fairly rapid rate now, which suggests the virus is circulating and containment is no longer possible.
More than 80 countries have now reported cases, although the actual numbers of reported cases are likely to be the tip of the iceberg; many people have only mild symptoms and may not be counted.
Supply-side:
As China gradually recovers from the initial peak of infections, we expect factory production to gradually return towards normal. However, the reduced capacity is likely to continue into the second quarter.
Demand-side:
While some supply restrictions ease, we are becoming more concerned about the probable impacts on demand as consumers moderate economic activity in the face of growing infection rates in multiple countries around the world. Our current scenario models a relatively modest decline in demand for smartphones outside China, but there is a growing likelihood that we will revise our estimates downward.
We have also modeled the likely impacts across a range of industry sectors relative to our base line forecasts. Some of these are shown in the chart below:
The impact to supply and demand was most acute in China. Supply restrictions have started to show up in other global markets. However we are now expecting to see some impact to demand in global markets as consumers moderate their economic activity in the face of personal and economic uncertainty. We nevertheless expect a rapid reversion as the worst of the infection passes with a slight positive rebound effect.
The Chinese automotive sector came to almost a complete halt in January and February. This was mostly driven by a massive drop in demand, although factories also ceased activity through a combination of the Lunar New Year and coronavirus.
Internationally, auto makers have been hit by reduced supplies of parts made by Chinese companies. Several have reported the need to reduce production until supplies return to normal.
We are modelling the Chinese and global automotive sectors to rebound relatively quickly with a slight positive rebound, though we doubt all of the shortfall will be recovered in the near term.
Streaming Media and Gaming
We expect the enforced isolation that many will experience will lead to a greater consumption of streamed media such as music and video, and an increase in online gaming.
Travel
Airlines are already cutting capacity – even between countries where there are limited outbreaks. This is driven by business travellers reducing flying – partly due to generally lower activity levels and partly due to the cancellation of large events, for example MWC and the Geneva Motor Show. We expect that as travellers realize that alternatives such as teleconferencing offers a good experience and people think harder about the need for travel – especially in the face of mounting climate change evidence — there will be a longer-term reduction in absolute person/km travelled. UK regional airline FlyBe collapsed late on 4th March. It had been struggling financially, but it cited reduced bookings caused by the coronavirus as a significant factor in it halting operations. It will likely not be the last airline to fail caused by coronavirus.
Retail
We think retail will be a tale of two types – offline, brick-and-mortar stores, are likely to suffer a short term decline, while online stores will benefit. Though if there is any significant and sustained impact on logistics, then online stores may also suffer. We expect both to revert to the mean over time, though online may enjoy a slight boost while offline suffers a slight long-term reduction.
Outlook
The likely extent of infections remains unclear however, we expect countries outside China will likely see a peak in infections in the May/June period before recovering towards normal by the end of 3Q beginning of 4Q. Countries’ ability to contain the outbreak now looks challenging with the emphasis shifting to managing the impact as best they can.
We will continue to monitor and update our scenarios as the situation unfolds.
South Korea: a spike in cases and lack of clarity among potentially infected peoples’ movements will lead to more cases developing over the next week or two. Containment currently looks challenging despite the alert level being raised to RED.
Italy: a popular tourist destination, Italy is now attempting to lock-down parts of the country most badly affected. Nevertheless, cases are emerging in other countries based on people travelling from Italy. Likely a prime source for infections across Europe. The forthcoming Italy vs Ireland rugby international match has been postponed based on concern about the virus spreading with travelling fans.
Japan: most cases relate to the impounded cruise liner, Diamond Princess, but the true number could be higher due to poor handling of passengers on the cruise ship.
Iran: even the health minister has been infected. Cases likely under-reported and given the importance of some infected areas to Muslim tourists, high likelihood of spread to other Muslim nations in the region.
U.K. has now started testing people showing flu-like symptoms but who have not been to known infected areas. If infection is found it will indicate that the viral spread has not been contained.
U.S. it is likely that the true extent of cases is unknown and unreported due to lack of screening on ports of entry, lack of sufficient diagnostic testing and lack of funding to health agencies to take effective action. Increased testing, like in the UK, will reveal to extent to which the viral spread has already occurred.
Overall, our expectation that we see widespread transmission of the disease and a concomitant impact on retail sales, supply chain disruption and other economic disturbance has risen from somewhat unlikely to likely. Companies will need to plan for an extended period of disruption to a business-as-usual situation – likely lasting well into the second quarter.
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]]>The post Huawei 1+8 Review: Look at What You Could Have Won appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>I had something of that feeling when reviewing a range of Huawei consumer electronics products. In this case though, it would have been something like, ‘Look at what you could have bought [if the US hadn’t taken action against Huawei.]’
In fairness though, none of the products reviewed have been outright banned from sale, but the restrictions imposed by US trade sanctions are such that, for many potential buyers, the core product here – the Huawei Mate 40 Pro – is difficult to feel comfortable buying, as it doesn’t include Google’s GMS, meaning no Play Store and the non-operation or unconventional operation of some apps, even if they can be located, using for example, Huawei’s Petal Search application.
The point of the this test though, is to review some highlights of Huawei’s 1+8+n strategy. This strategy places the smartphone at the heart of two concentric circles of devices. The 1 represents the smartphone. The 8 are Huawei’s own partner devices. The n represents the extended array of devices that can be woven into partnership with the other devices. Several other smartphone vendors are also using a similar strategy.
For this test we were provided with the Huawei Mate 40 Pro as the ‘1’. Representatives of the ‘8’ included a computing device in the shape of the Huawei MateBook X – a compact and very light notebook PC, a wearable – the Watch GT2 Porsche Design, and two hearable devices – the Huawei FreeBuds Studio and the intriguing Huawei Gentle Monster glasses.
So, do these devices work as a cohesive set that introduces levels of seamlessness rarely seen in consumer electronics? Let’s find out.
We’re not going to exhaustively review the phone. But it’s worth touching on some of the highlights and lowlights about the central device in Huawei’s strategy.
The Mate 40 Pro is based on the latest (and last..?) HiSilicon chipset, the HiSilicon Kirin 9000, which is based on the same 5nm EUV process as the Apple A14 Bionic and the Qualcomm Snapdragon 888. However, unlike the Apple A14, the HiSilicon Kirin 9000 integrates the modem into the single chip. Unfortunately for Huawei, it was prevented from continuing production beyond mid-September 2020 owing to US sanctions, so the company was only able to make a limited number of Kirin 9000s that it is gradually burning through, and will, at some point, run out of completely, unless the US does an unlikely U-turn on its approach to Huawei.
The Mate 40 Pro is equipped with a 6.76-inch OLED display in an 18.5:9 aspect ratio. The display has radically radiused edges. While the design looks sophisticated, when apps have a white background the colour at the edges is distorted, which doesn’t look so great. And some apps run text so close to the edge of the screen that letters at the beginnings and ends of lines are almost obscured by the edges of the display. Ultimately this makes the display feel like style over function. A less radically radiused display may look a little less appealing, but would probably work better in practice. In addition, the colours the display renders seem almost muted. Even with the display settings option set to ‘Vivid’ the display somehow lacks the normal punch seen on high-end OLED displays. This is especially noticeable on greens that can look a little dark, for example Spotify’s logo doesn’t look quite right.
The Kirin 9000 is an SoC with an integrated 5G modem. We were eager to try the performance back to back with our previous best on test OPPO Reno 4 Pro. The OPPO ‘only’ has the Qualcomm Snapdragon 765G chipset with an integrated Snapdragon X52 modem. We would have liked to test the Kirin 9000 against the Snapdragon 888, but did not have a device available with which to carry out the comparison. The tests were performed within line of sight of a Vodafone 5G base station. We used two apps for the tests: 5G Mark, which performs a series of tests that replicate real-world type applications, it then provides a numerical score, and Open Signal, which is a more traditional speed-test application. The tests were performed sequentially on each device rather than in parallel, so variations in the network congestion may have played a part in the scores, but we repeated the tests several times to try to average-out any individual test anomalies.
On 5G Mark, the best overall score achieved by the Mate 40 Pro was 176,403 with a peak download speed of 259Mbps and upload of 71.4Mbps. The OPPO achieved a best overall score of 87,897 with a peak download speed of 139.3Mbps and peak upload of 51.8Mbps.
On Open Signal, the Mate 40 Pro achieved a peak download speed of 416Mbps and a peak upload speed of 84.5Mbps. The OPPO achieved a peak download speed of 266Mbps and a peak upload speed of 62.7Mbps. So, across both testing applications, the Mate 40 Pro was noticeably faster than the OPPO.
Cameras are the technology that Huawei has led the smartphone market in for many years. The Mate 40 Pro is near the pinnacle of Huawei’s camera development. And while it is truly excellent, others are now catching up, and in some cases, arguably, are slightly better. Nevertheless, if you’re looking for the best camera phone, then the Mate 40 Pro will not disappoint. The following are a sample of some of the images we captured. Some can be compared with those taken in an earlier test, albeit with smartphones from lower price tiers.
This still life arrangement looks good, with life-like colour reproduction.
The colours and resolution are pleasing.
The detail of Evie’s coat is well-captured, there’s good separation of the subject and background, and the colours of the wall in the background are faithfully reproduced.
This was difficult lighting as the sun was behind cloud except in the background, so light levels were low on the subject but the background is bright. In addition, several steps of zoom were engaged. It’s not a beautiful photograph, but the camera has done well to resolve as much as it has.
Astronomic shots are one of Huawei’s ‘party tricks’, but other smartphone makers are catching up.
Microsoft’s Windows Phone OS was good, but app developers looked at the numbers of Windows Phone users and decided not to bother supporting the platform. This ultimately doomed Windows Phone to failure. Huawei is, justifiably, proud of the progress it has made in developing an alternative app store, the AppGallery, and in persuading a huge number of developers to bring their apps to Huawei’s devices. But the reality is that despite Huawei’s best efforts, there will always be apps that don’t work, or don’t work as they should. The set of apps that people use is as unique as each individual. So, many people may be able to find almost all the apps that they use on a daily basis. For me, however, there are several that I use and that simply don’t work without GMS. And that’s non-negotiable; I could not live with this phone. Some apps, however, say they won’t work without GMS – for example Microsoft Teams, but actually work fine. Potential buyers therefore need to be sure that the apps they use regularly are straightforwardly available without having to resort to what can feel like questionable work arounds.
One aspect that is almost comically bad is Huawei’s own ‘intelligent’ assistant. It goes by the name Celia and, in my limited testing, is almost completely useless. For example, if I ask Celia what the time is, she refers me to internet search results. If I ask a maths question, I am referred to internet search results. It should be stated that no search results were actually offered. The only thing that Celia seemed capable of doing was setting an alarm.
So, despite the power and sophistication of the Mate 40 Pro, I can’t help feeling that it is hobbled by the lack of GMS. It is technically feasible to side-load GMS, but would you really want to do this on a $1500 phone if there’s a chance of screwing it up and finding yourself out of warranty?
This is perhaps the neatest and best-made laptop I’ve used. It weighs a whisker over a kilo (2.2 pounds), packs a 13-inch screen into a chassis with footprint smaller than an A4 piece of paper. The hinge has just the right amount of friction so it moves with ease but stays where it’s put. The chassis is made from an aluminium magnesium alloy that’s both very light, but robust – so despite its diminutive size and weight, it actually feels tough. The touch screen is decently bright and the touch works well. The keypad is pleasant to use but the trackpad lacks feedback on ‘mouse’ clicks. This is because it relies on a haptic motor for user feel. It can be adjusted however.
The particular model we’re reviewing is running a 10th generation Intel Core i5 processor with 16GB RAM and a 512GB SSD. We have not run a full suite of tests on the performance, but we have compared it to an Apple MacBook Air running the new M1 chip, and the performance of the Huawei is dramatically poorer. We ran a test in Excel written by a Counterpoint Research analyst. When this test was done on a several mostly Core i7-based laptops, we were getting an average of 38.9 seconds with the fastest at 18 seconds. The Huawei MateBook X managed the test in a snail-like 92 seconds. By comparison the Apple MacBook Air M1 scorched the test in just 1.88 seconds! So for heavyweight Excel tasks we would steer clear of the MateBook X. But for light tasks, the i5-powered MateBook is okay.
And whereas battery life on the MacBook Air is excellent, the MateBook X, while not bad, doesn’t really compare with the latest Apple M1-powered device. You can expect a battery life of around seven hours in normal use – checking email, writing documents and surfing the web etc. Anything more intense will reduce the battery autonomy. All in all, it’s around half the time the Apple M1 is achieving in similar types of use.
What I had been looking forward to, however, was the ease of interacting with the Mate 40 Pro smartphone. I have attended many demonstrations where a Huawei smartphone is seamlessly paired with a Huawei notebook PC. This allows for a complete replication of the smartphone on the PC and makes shifting photos, for example, as easy as drag and drop. However, when I came to try to pair the PC and phone, I could not get it to work. I tried multiple times, rebooting the phone and PC, but to no avail. I tried troubleshooting with the PC Manager application, and online, but nothing helped. In the end, I resorted to using the USB-C cable to connect the devices, but this is not the promised functionality.
As with most notebook PCs the webcam is terrible. Why this is the case, especially in the light of COVID-driven home working where webcams have suddenly taken-on added significance, is beyond the scope of this review. However, the position of the MateBook X webcam is strange. It is embedded at the top of the keyboard and pops-up when required. This positioning was presumably done to allow for the largest screen real-estate and super-thin bezels. And one clear benefit is that it can be closed, so the user can be confident that no-one is spying on them via some sort of back-door malware. The downside however, is that it is very difficult to position the laptop in any way to take a flattering image of the user. This lack of webcam quality is especially egregious coming from Huawei, that produces some of the very best smartphone camera systems.
Equally mystifying is why there is no cellular connectivity option (and never has been on prior Huawei laptop PCs). When asked, Huawei typically says that it is complexity and cost few users want or need when Wi-Fi is so plentiful. However, most Wi-Fi hotspots are super spreaders for malware, while others, such as those typically found in hotels, are often ponderously slow. We can’t help feeling this was a missed opportunity.
So, while the MateBook X is a lovely device, it is priced around the same as a MacBook Air M1 with a similar memory configuration, but there is no comparison in terms of performance. And the much touted interaction with the Huawei smartphone almost completely failed to live up to expectation. So, all-in-all, a disappointment.
We are no stranger to the Watch GT2. We had one to test in 2019 and used it during a swim run competition. Huawei updated the GT2 in 2020, adding the GT2 Pro. What we have here is the special edition Porsche Design version of the GT2 Pro, but it’s fundamentally the same watch, but just with marginally fancier cosmetics, and costing a lot more money.
And as a smartwatch, it is handsome. The titanium chassis is paired with a titanium linked bracelet, which can be shortened by removing links. However, a resin strap is also provided and, as this was more practical for the types of activities I do, I switched to the resin strap for the test. The face of the watch is clad in sapphire crystal and the back is ceramic. The display is a 1.39 inch AMOLED of 454×454 pixels. The watch uses Huawei’s own OS, so it is not compatible with Wear OS apps, for example. The battery life is excellent. In the two weeks I used the watch I only needed to charge it once.
Set-up and sync is via Huawei’s Health app, which tells you something of where its focus is relative to wearable devices. The primary functions are health and fitness related. It supports a wide array of sports, and sensors provide for things like, sleep monitoring, 24-hour heart rate monitoring and even SpO2 (blood oxygenation), which has come to the fore in the current COVID pandemic.
The Health app is a closed loop though, with no apparent ability to share workout data with other platforms such as Strava. For me this renders the device useless as a sports watch. I have been telling Huawei this for several years, but there’s been no change. There are a small number of apps that can be downloaded to the watch. I tried Fitify, but everything in the app was chargeable, so I was not able to try it out. Fitify does not report to Strava and its programmes seemed to be based mostly on bodyweight or gym-based workouts.
One really irritating aspect of the watch is its habit of providing regular, loud, updates on progress during a workout. For example, if running, every kilometer, the watch will shout out your progress and heart rate. I thought I had found a way to silence it, but no, it’s still shouting at me every time I do something. I can see that some might find this useful, but it should be possible to silence it if, like me, you find it maddening.
One of the most intriguing devices in the package we’re reviewing, is a set of eye-glasses by Gentle Monster. The ones here have clear lenses and, presumably, can be specified with corrective lenses. Versions as sunglasses are also available. The arms of the glasses have embedded loudspeakers and connect via Bluetooth to the phone. There are no buttons on the arms of the glasses but gestures can be used to control the audio output. The case acts as a recharging port, but the case doesn’t have any independent means of charging the glasses; it needs to be plugged into a USB-C charging cable.
I normally wear glasses, so these were slightly difficult to review because they do not have corrective lenses. However, I tried them while wandering around my house. The audio quality is reasonably good considering the speakers are firing into the air around the ear, rather than into it, as is the case with conventional earphones. Call quality is also relatively clear, though the person I was speaking to said the sound on their end was a bit harsh.
The biggest issue though, is one of sound leakage. Because the speakers are just broadcasting sound, it is easy for anyone nearby to also hear what is being broadcast. This means the glasses would not be appropriate for use while commuting on public transport. They could however, be used while running or cycling, although wind noise may become an issue at speed. We can see some use cases though, for example, providing audio guidance while navigating.
I use a variety of hearable devices. My go-to hearable for activities such as walking and running is the Aftershokz Aeropex. For public transport, flights (when they’re possible), and general music listening, I like over-the-ear headphones such as Bose QC35 or Sony WH-1000XM3. Overall, I found the Gentle Monsters more of a novelty than a device that I could see myself using regularly. But some might find utility in them.
And talking of the Bose QC35 and Sony WH-1000XM3, the final product in this review is Huawei’s contribution to the active noise cancelling (ANC) over-the-ear headphone landscape, the FreeBuds Studio. These are available for less than $200; which is a fair bit cheaper than comparable Bose and Sony models.
The FreeBuds Studio include a solid design and dual-connectivity, so you can maintain a phone connection while listening to music on a PC, for example. The ANC has a number of modes, from off, to full ANC, to a hear-through mode that passes through external ambient sound. The hear-through mode is useful for being aware of public address announcements, for example, but it sounded a little unnatural, and I wasn’t keen on the voice that announced the change of states. The headphones contain an array of microphones that help isolate the wearer’s voice from background noise. Overall this worked well in my limited tests.
The headphones have buttons to manage the change of ANC state, power and Bluetooth pairing. Other controls, volume, stop/start, skip etc. are managed by gestures on a touch area on the right earpiece. These work well, once the fairly intuitive gestures are learned. They are also aware of when you remove them and will pause music and restart when they are put back on.
Battery life is just about okay at around eight hours in ANC mode, but less than my Bose which will easily handle a full flight from London to Hong Kong or San Francisco – i.e. more than 12 hours. But recharging via USB-C is fast and easy.
However, I don’t find the FreeBuds particularly comfortable to wear. This is, of course, subjective so someone else may find them just fine. The music quality was, to my ears, inferior to both my now three-year old Bose and two-year old Sony models. It could be that with longer use the FreeBuds would develop greater warmth, but they just don’t deliver the music quality of either of the other two headphones.
This was an interesting test. Many smartphone makers are adopting a similar strategy of surrounding their smartphones with a set of related products. Apple is the archetype here with not only partner devices, but also an array of services.
Based on this test, however, I didn’t find many of the Huawei partner devices particularly compelling – either on their own, or in concert with the smartphone device. And even the central smartphone device is now hobbled by the lack of GMS services.
So rather than a case of ‘Come and look at what you could have won’, it’s more like, ‘Imagine what could have been’.
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]]>The post Comparing Mid-range 5G Smartphones for Around $700 and Below appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>Heading into 2021, the range of 5G smartphones continues to broaden, and with Qualcomm launching 5G on its Snapdragon 400 series, we can expect the retail prices of 5G capable smartphones to fall further. However, the ongoing component shortages may make pricing more resilient than it might otherwise be.
Across Europe, the proportion of premium devices sold remains more or less constant. However, the market for mid-range smartphones has grown and is expected to continue expanding. We have collected a cross-section of three mid-range 5G smartphones for comparison. These include the OPPO Reno 4 Pro 5G (12GB RAM with 256GB storage). It is priced at $970 (GBP £699 here in the UK), but available from some channels and elsewhere in Europe for around $780.
The next is the Nokia 8.3 5G (6GB RAM with 64GB storage). It is officially priced at $690, but now available for around $475. Lastly, we have the realme X50 Pro 5G (12GB RAM with 256GB storage). It is priced officially at $970, but now widely available for around $600.
The OPPO and Nokia smartphones are relatively recent launches – both using the excellent Qualcomm Snapdragon 765G platform, with integrated Snapdragon X52 5G modem. This configuration supports theoretical peak download speeds up to 3.7Gbps, and upload speeds up to 1.6Gbps. The realme smartphone, on the other hand, has been available for almost a year and is based on the previous flagship Qualcomm Snapdragon 865 mobile platform, featuring a discrete Snapdragon X55 5G modem. It supports peak download speeds up to 7.2Gbps, and upload speeds up to 3Gbps. While both modems support mmWave and Sub-6GHz, the devices used in this comparison only feature Sub-6GHz; mmWave spectrum is not yet available in the UK and most of Europe.
The launch of the 5G capable iPhone 12 for $799 established a benchmark for the very high-end of the mid-range, so to speak. Apple’s pricing has often created headroom that Android rivals can exploit. Had Apple launched at $699 – where the iPhone 11 had the year before – it would likely have forced more compression in Android pricing, but the $100 buffer has given Android rivals some space to play a broader game with their portfolios. But for now, we are going to look at what plus or minus £500 (US$ 690) will buy you in terms of 5G handsets.
The design of smartphones has improved over the last five years. The products being reviewed here are good examples of the quality of the designs now available to consumers, and we have to work hard to find fault. The standout product of the three is the OPPO. It has a beautiful, graduated sky blue back made of textured glass that feels almost sandblasted. This blends smoothly into its shiny metal frame that, in turn, blends well into the curved glass of the display. The back is eye-catching and resists smudging from fingerprints. The cameras are contained in a distinctly designed array at the top left of the back. This is an on-trend position consistent with many products being launched in early 2021.
The Nokia is also good-looking. It too is a graduated blue but of a darker shade and made from shiny glass. While attractive, it is prone to showing fingerprints. It is also slippery and apt to slide-off even moderately sloping surfaces. The Nokia has a stainless-steel chassis that blends well with the back, but the display is not quite as seamlessly fitted to the sides as OPPO has managed. Close inspection shows a black, radiused frame sandwiched between the display glass and the sides of the Nokia. It is not obtrusive in any way but less slick than the OPPO. The camera system on the Nokia is a circular array in the top center of the back panel. This is reminiscent of the position that Huawei has used on its Mate series and a few other products. There’s nothing inherently wrong with it but could be regarded as off-trend relative to newer products, but it is distinctive.
The realme, as with several aspects of these three products, sits somewhere in the middle, though in this case closer to the Nokia. Its back is also of glass with a matt finish, but it is somehow more prone to gathering fingerprints than the OPPO.
The OPPO and realme both offer under-display fingerprint sensors (FPS) with simple facial recognition offered as well. The under-screen FPS works well on both phones. The Nokia’s FPS is integrated into the power button on the right-hand side, which also acts as the screen wake, lock button. The FPS works okay, though can sometimes be a little hesitant with unlocking. This also means a left-handed person will likely need to use their index finger to unlock the device.
On the Nokia, above the FPS button is a volume rocker. On the left-hand edge of the phone is a button whose sole purpose is to invoke the Google Assistant. This function can be disabled in Settings, but the button cannot be reassigned. I tend not to use Assistant much and found the placement of the button irritating; it was too easy to accidentally activate when in a pocket or otherwise handling the phone. Both the OPPO and realme have the power/lock/wake button in the same place as the Nokia, but the volume rocker on the left-hand edge of the phone.
None of these phones have any IPX rating, usually one of the first casualties of cost cutting.
Due to the ongoing limitations imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, we were not able to use 5G across a wide area. We, therefore, conducted 5G testing in and around Newbury in the UK. Newbury is the home of Vodafone and there is an established 5G network in the town with several base stations. Most of the tests were carried out within line of sight of a base station, while others were conducted at the very edge of coverage.
We used a mix of two testing applications for all our tests, OpenSignal and 5G Mark. 5G Mark tests a range of real-world use cases beyond simple uplink/downlink speeds. For example, it tests streaming and browsing performance. It usefully provides a numerical score after each test.
Using the 5G Mark test application, the OPPO achieved the highest overall score at almost 168,000, with the realme second with 150,000 and the Nokia bringing up the rear at 125,000. The OPPO achieved the highest download speed at 237Mbps, the realme at 236Mbps while the Nokia only managed 167Mbps. It should be stressed that these tests were conducted in the same location but not simultaneously, so not too much should be inferred from this. For example, the OPPO also returned the lowest uplink speed during one test.
Nevertheless, looking at the results from our OpenSignal tests, the Nokia did not exceed 300Mbps while both the OPPO and realme achieved more than 300Mbps, with OPPO hitting the fastest speed of 346Mbps. So, while we are not claiming that these tests were in any way particularly scientific, they do illustrate a range of performance achievable in the real world. And during these particular tests, the OPPO smartphone performed best.
Something we have noticed with both the OPPO and the realme, is a tendency for the phone to report it is connected to 5G when it was only in 4G coverage. While we have not been able to confirm the pattern, it appears to show 4G connectivity until it gets a whiff of the 5G NR, at which point the signal indicator changes to show 5G. However, even when the device reverts to the 4G network it continues to report a 5G signal. This may be a peculiarity of the Color OS that both OPPO and realme use, or it could be something else. It nevertheless creates a false promise, which leads to elevated expectations for data speeds that are not matched by reality. See the screenshot below. We think this is a serious deficiency that OPPO (and realme) should address urgently. Operators will likely not approve of devices that erroneously report network type.
Placed side-by-side, the Nokia is noticeably bigger than both the other phones. It features a 6.81-inch IPS LCD display, although, with the lowest screen-to-body ratio, its slightly bigger bezels don’t help. The realme is the most compact thanks to its 6.44-inch AMOLED display, however it is quite heavy at 205g, but still over 20g lighter than the hefty Nokia. By comparison, the OPPO is startlingly light at just 172g, but it still packs a 6.55-inch AMOLED display. Part of the weight difference is in the battery, of which more later.
Looked at in isolation, the Nokia’s display is quite good. It’s big, bright and, at 1080p, offers good levels of detail. The viewing angles, though, are noticeably compromised and the backlight levels seem a little patchy. Nothing dramatic, but around the punch hole for the front camera, there is a slight shadow.
Where the display on the Nokia is deficient though is the refresh rate. At 60Hz it is noticeably less smooth when scrolling compared to either of the other two, both of which offer 90Hz refresh rates on their AMOLED displays. We can’t be sure if the low refresh rate is responsible for the lack of smoothness while scrolling though; for example, playing fast-moving games on the Nokia works just fine.
For the camera tests, we have concentrated on the Oppo and the Nokia. The Nokia 8.3 has a 64MP main camera with an f/1.9 aperture, a 1/1.72-inch sensor, 0.8µm pixel size, and phase detection autofocus (PDAF). Its ultrawide camera is an auto-focusing 12MP sensor, with f/2.2 aperture, 120-degree field-of-view (fov), with a 1/2.43-inch sensor, 1.4µm pixel size. It also sports a 2MP macro lens and a 2 MP depth sensor. The camera array is co-branded with ZEISS. Its front camera is a single 24 MP, f/2.0 aperture, 1/2.8-inch sensor, 0.9µm pixel size in a punch hole.
The Oppo has a 48MP main camera module with an f/1.7 aperture, with a 26mm focal length, 1/2.0-inch, 0.8µm pixel size, PDAF, and laser AF with Optical Image Stabilization (OIS). A 13 MP, f/2.4 aperture, 52mm telephoto with a 1/3.4-inch sensor, 1.0µm pixel size, PDAF, 2x optical zoom. Its ultrawide camera has identical paper specs to the Nokia. Its selfie camera is a single 32 MP 1/2.8-inch sensor, with a slightly smaller f/2.4 aperture and 0.8µm pixels.
The following test shots were conducted at the same time with almost identical lighting conditions. These are not full, scientific camera tests, but designed to give a flavor of what average users can expect in every day, use. I was not able to persuade any human family members to act as portrait subjects, so I used my dog, Evie, who did not complain.
All the shots are as they came out of the camera, with no post-processing or filters or have been applied. The first is a still-life taken indoors in natural daylight.
The Nokia 8.3 (top) does a reasonable job. The colors are good but, on closer inspection, its aggressive use of a narrow field of focus means detail is lost on items further back in the frame. The OPPO (below) retains more detail, although it looks slightly over-exposed compared to the Nokia, it feels truer to the way it looked to the eye.
Here the Nokia 8.3 again shows its aggressive narrowing of the depth of field of focus. The AI correctly identified the subject as a dog and has focused on Evie’s eye. A fair amount of detail has been retained on her face, but there is also noise around her ear and noticeably so in the reflections on the window in the background. The color has a bluish cast. The OPPO has retained excellent detail of the subject and the overall colors are more faithfully captured.
The Nokia’s blueish cast is again visible in this outdoor close-up. Also, the resolution of the petals on, especially, the distant flowers, looks a little unnatural.
The OPPO keeps a more realistic color balance – especially of the greens. But it also struggles with edge resolution. Overall it does a better job.
In this shot of Aphrodite, the Nokia retains more detail of the moss, but the bluish cast is again very evident compared to the OPPO which again does a better job of faithfully capturing colors.
The next pair of pictures are with the macro mode enabled. A honeybee happened to arrive, surprisingly given it is mid-February, and made a good subject for the Nokia 8.3. The Nokia manages just about okay, but the peripheral parts of the shot are poorly rendered, and the exposure is not optimal.
Even though the OPPO missed the bee, it displays much better color capture in the flower stems and gives a more pleasing result overall.
The selfie shots were taken in slightly darker conditions than the other shots. Both phones do a reasonable job but the Nokia’s bluish color bias remains in evidence. The Oppo applies some ‘beauty’ filtering off-the-bat. This can be turned off in settings.
Audio: dual speakers a necessity
The Nokia has a single, bottom-firing speaker. Its positioning means it is often covered by a hand, for example when playing a game, or holding the phone in landscape mode when watching a streaming video. The Nokia does, however, retain a 3.5mm audio jack plug, which is an increasingly rare feature. Wired headphones also provide an antenna for the included FM radio, which is absent from the other phones on test.
Both the OPPO and realme have stereo speakers and are noticeably better at projecting sound and do not suffer from the same problem of a hand covering the speaker.
To compare replaying music through headphones, we used Bose QC35 headphones and played a range of music streamed from Spotify on the highest quality playback settings.
Overall, both the OPPO and realme offer a richer tone and ‘larger’ sound stage with more separation. This is likely due to both incorporating Dolby Atmos that also allows for a much greater range of adjustability compared to the Nokia.
When moving the listening to the Nokia, there was a slight drop in tonal range and the sound was more central. The differences were marginal though, so if listened to in isolation the quality was generally good across all the test subjects.
The Nokia’s 4500mAh battery is the largest of the three and subjectively it feels like it lasts slightly longer. The OPPO’s is the smallest at 4000mAh – which helps it achieve its slim profile and light weight. However, we were caught out a few times almost draining the battery in a day and this with relatively modest use. Were we able to conduct normal usage testing with a good proportion of mobile use and a mix of applications, we think that it may be necessary to keep a charger handy to top-up during the day. This is not the case with the realme, which proved frugal with its battery and reliably lasted for day even with intensive use.
Recharging is a good experience with the provided chargers with both the OPPO and realme; they both use the same fast-charging system, though with differing brand names. OPPO calls it SuperVOOC 2.0, while realme opts for SuperDart Flash charge. However, they both use the same 65W recharge system that enables zero to 100% in around 35 minutes and 60% in around 15 minutes.
Nokia claims to offer fast charging, but it offers a relatively puny 18W charging capability, but we have confidence the Nokia will last a day, so may have a less urgent need for rapid charging.
None offer wireless charging.
Nokia proudly uses a pure Android set-up. It is a little vanilla if you are used to the frills afforded by the skins most OEMs apply. One aspect I am not keen on, for example, is how the Photo Gallery is incorporated into Google Photos. However, it is easy enough to select a view that filters only the pictures on the device.
Both the OPPO and realme use versions of Oppo’s ColorOS, though realme calls it realme UI. Functionally it’s almost identical. It works well on both devices, although we did experience some minor freezing with the Oppo, it seemed to clear spontaneously within a short time. ColorOS is clean and nicely designed. Overall, it feels sharper than the vanilla Android in the Nokia and seems to offer more options for personalization.
Although we tested these phones back-to-back, there is a big price difference between the Nokia and the Oppo. At $475, the Nokia feels like good value for money right now – the OS is clean, the design good and battery life ample. Looked at in isolation, it’s big, bright display makes consuming content a pleasure. But if you can find a bit more cash to spare, the Oppo’s beautiful OLED display and excellent camera system, all wrapped in a remarkably light and slickly-designed package, stands a notch above the Nokia. But, given the price differential, so it should.
The realme is a powerful phone, but its looks are understated to the point of anonymity. It’s overall fine, but unremarkable.
However, the one thing though that concerns us most about both the Oppo, and realme, is their reporting being connected to a 5G network when they are actually only on 4G – something that must be addressed in future software upgrades.
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]]>The post Oculus Quest 2 Review – The Quest for Perfection Continues appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>Full disclosure up-front, I have been a VR skeptic. Not because I don’t ‘get’ the concept of VR, I do, but I struggle to see how it fits into the current technology landscape beyond a variation on gaming and for valuable, but niche, industrial and enterprise use cases. I have been waiting for the day I can start recommending VR to friends, family, and business users for a whole range of use cases. Many years ago, I read Ready Player One and loved the alternate world concepts that author Ernest Cline brought vividly to life. So, does the Oculus Quest 2 change my level of skepticism and make me believe that we’re on the verge of a new dawn of VR growth? Hmm, no, not yet, but it does move the game forward quite substantially.
While I was not expecting any miraculous improvement in optical quality over the previous generation devices, the resolution is still disappointing. When deeply involved in a game, you tend not to notice, but when using the inbuilt browser to watch YouTube videos, for example, the pixel net is clearly visible; and fine details are lost in the haze of low-resolution imaging. Netflix is available as an Oculus app but you’d have to be crazy to watch a movie in such low resolution.
In a world where pixels have become almost invisible – on the screen of the PC that I am typing this on, my smartphone display, even my seven-year-old TV – it’s almost impossible to see the pixels…unless you put a magnifying glass to the display and get really close to it. That’s effectively what happens with VR headsets. The Quest 2 is objectively better than the previous generation Quest, and other standalone headsets I’ve tried, but don’t expect true immersive reality. If you want to get some idea what it’s like, try watching a YouTube video on a large PC display at 240p resolution. High-definition it is not.
The only VR headset where I’ve not been acutely aware of the pixel net has been the Varjo VR- and XR-series devices. However, these are powerful PC-driven devices, optimized for enterprise use and that cost thousands of dollars.
While the resolution of the display has improved over the first generation Quest (see table below), Oculus has opted for an LCD panel rather than the OLED used in the first-generation model. This means that blacks are less, well, black, and more of a grey. Again, in gameplay situations, it’s not that big of a deal, but you do notice the general grey-ish hue.
The Fresnel lenses are the same as on the first-gen Quest. They work quite well, but you do notice some flaring and fringing around the edges of bright points. This is likely impossible to avoid while using Fresnel lenses. Again, it’s not too much of an issue in the gameplay, but it adds to the overall sense of relatively low optical quality. Some might say I’m being harsh, but I’m just saying it how it is. In a high-definition world, it is unusual to experience low-definition, unless something is wrong somewhere.
Oculus has improved the frame rate from 72Hz to 90Hz. However, for now, this is experimental and only applies to very limited situations such as the main menu area. Currently, it has to be enabled in settings, which necessitates a restart. This will become standard out-of-the-box at some point and Oculus has promised that more and more content will be rolled out that will take advantage of the faster frame rate, but it’s unclear exactly when this will occur. And as games and other content are modified to take advantage of the higher refresh rates, any content that is already downloaded will need to be updated.
Setting the inter-pupillary distance (IPD) is important for a good VR experience. If incorrectly set it can be a factor in causing motion-sickness. Where the original Quest offered continuous IPD adjustment between 58-72mm, Quest 2 has three pre-set distances at 58mm, 63mm, and 68mm. There is little guidance to help you get it set correctly, which seems a bit odd considering its importance. And the adjustment is done by manually pulling the lenses apart. There’s a small indicator with the numbers 1, 2, or 3, corresponding with the various positions. If your IPD falls outside of the upper and lower limits, too bad. But also if your optimum position is between any of the presets, well, that’s too bad as well. Fortunately, for me, the middle setting is about right, while for my sons and my wife, the narrower, position 1, seems to work okay.
The head strap is a flimsy elastic item that doesn’t do a great job of distributing weight comfortably. It is tricky to adjust, but needs adjusting every time the headset is put on. The Premium head strap is better, but costs an additional $49 (a strap with an additional battery is also available but costs $129) the premium strap is likely better, unless you wear glasses, when it can be difficult to get the headset on without smudging or squashing your glasses. Incidentally, for glasses wearers, the standard pack includes a small spacer to improve the fit. The headset is around 70g lighter than the original Quest, but we think most of the reduced weight comes from the flimsier strap, so the weight as experienced by the user is not much different.
Sound emanates from the harder portion of the strap next to the ears. It’s adequate for most purposes but suffers a lot a sound leakage. For a more immersive experience, there is a 3.5mm jack socket into which wired headphones can be plugged. A Bluetooth option would have been good as fewer and fewer wired headsets are available.
The hand controllers are decent with halo style loops that include IR beacons for hand tracking. They are slippery to hold though and need the string loops to secure them to a wrist; should one escape your grasp during vigorous gameplay, it won’t fly across the room. Some reviewers have complained of relative inaccuracy in tracking the controller’s movements. I have not noticed anything unusual, but I may not be sensitive to the small degrees of variation others have reported. Each controller is powered by a single AA battery. I don’t know how long they last, but as both controllers are still showing 100%, I am guessing it could be quite a while.
The Quest 2 brings many improvements in hardware over the original device. Quest 2 is the first device to ship with Qualcomm’s application-specific Snapdragon XR2 platform – the original Quest was based on the Snapdragon 835, which was already around a year old when the first Quest device was launched.
While the XR2 was positioned by Qualcomm as 5G-ready, the Quest 2 has no cellular connectivity option – only WiFi. However, it does benefit from enhanced graphics, resolution, and AI performance. The XR2 can support up to seven concurrent camera feeds and a dedicated computer vision processor. The platform also supports low-latency video pass-through. This can be appreciated particularly when setting up a gameplay area. With the headset on, the user is asked to mark out an area in which gameplay can take place. This is done by using one of the controllers to ‘paint’ the edge of the game area. This is much better than IR beacons. The headset ‘remembers’ several gameplay areas and will also ‘see’ if an object is obstructing some part of the gameplay area and highlight it for moving out of the way. The video pass-through is shown in stark monochrome, but it’s surprisingly effective.
The initial set-up was easy. You start by downloading an app to a partner smartphone. Then identify the particular headset (Oculus Quest 2), enter a code from the headset, and follow the set-up instructions. It takes a few minutes and you’re ready to go. However, it should be noted that it’s impossible to get started without a partner smartphone. And it’s impossible to get started without a Facebook account. This last point seems minor – but it’s not. There are many gamers for whom Facebook is anathema and the shift of all Oculus properties to being linked to a Facebook account therefore renders all Oculus products beyond redemption. Facebook is held in such suspicion that many potential users swear they will never use Oculus products…ever. Facebook’s interest in Oculus and VR is beyond the scope of this review. We will discuss it in a separate research report.
The main menu is one of a series of attractive ‘home’ environments with a console that acts as the jumping-off point for games and other content. The settings menu can also be launched from here, together with a browser. The OS is built on a forked version of Android and works smoothly.
There is a useful training app that helps new users become accustomed to most actions they’ll need to use such as grasping virtual objects.
There is some free content available – particularly video — and a few games. The most engaging free game is Echo VR, which is a bit like zero gravity ultimate frisbee. It provides a good demonstration of what VR can currently offer. However, almost all other games need to be purchased and they’re expensive – most costing $20 to $30 or more. And the number of games available seems modest currently – at least in terms of ones that you would want to play. However, more are in the pipeline including Assassin’s Creed and Splinter Cell. And if the Quest game library offers too little to interest, it is possible to hook-up the Quest 2 to a PC via an optional ($79) Oculus Link cable. This then allows the headset to slave off a PC and to play more demanding games. Using this route users can also access Steam VR’s library of game titles.
One of the complaints reviewers cite most often regarding the current crop of games is the rapidity of gameplay; the story of a game playing out in as few as three hours. Many games do have good re-playability, but the high entry cost highlights the fact that there are relatively few users to amortize the costs of authoring the games or adapting them from other platforms.
Beat Saber is among the most recommended and provides a decent challenge. My sons, and my wife – who is far away from a typical gamer – were able to rapidly get engaged and enjoy the game.
My younger son has been enjoying playing Population: One, in which he is teamed with other users from around the world, who then play collaboratively. It’s a Battle Royale-style game with the unique attribute of being able to climb vertical structures and jump off by spreading your arms and gliding as though wearing a wingsuit.
The app on the phone can be used to provide a third-person view of the game action taking place inside the headset. The resolution is even lower than the headset itself but does allow several people to enjoy the gaming action with a single headset.
Other content that’s readily available is video from Oculus TV. Most video content is of the 360-degree type. It’s okay but suffers from the low-resolution issue. And if there is fast motion in the video it can appear jerky – for example watching a skier traverse down a mountain at speed.
Most content developed for Oculus Quest and even Oculus Go should be playable, but it’s worth checking before upgrading to Quest 2.
Battery life is around two hours of continuous gameplay. It’s not a lot, but more than enough for one person. However, if the headset were being passed around between a few players, the battery may give up before the players do.
I am likely not the target market for the Quest 2, so I asked my teenage sons (17 and 14 years of age) if they were ready to swap their PC gaming environments for the Quest 2 (we have not tried the Oculus Link to heavier games). They both looked at me incredulously. And both made similar sorts of comments: my elder son said the Quest 2 was fun as far as it went, but he thought it gimmicky. However, he did say it was better than mobile gaming. My younger son said he sees it more like Nintendo’s Switch; a device that’s more powerful and immersive than mobile games, but one you can use anywhere. However, he also pointed out that the Switch benefits from a host of first party and third party games that Quest 2 doesn’t yet have.
The low starting price of Quest 2 is likely to be its strongest attraction. It is a capable device and will allow new users to get into VR with a relatively low investment. Tech-savvy gamers are likely to be put off by the Facebook-ization of the Oculus environment. But there are many potential consumers who won’t care or who won’t think about the ramifications of Facebook gathering all your VR usage data and more.
We expect Oculus 2, despite its various shortcomings, to do very well during this holiday season and will likely outsell its predecessor products by a sizable margin.
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]]>The post Aftershokz Aeropex Review: No Bone to Pick Here appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>All of Aftershokz products are based on the idea of bone conduction. This is the almost magical ability to apply vibrations to the bones of the head (typically the temporal bones), which directly interact with your inner ear to generate sound, bypassing the outer ear, including the eardrum, entirely. However, this means the outer ear is still open and can hear ambient sounds as well. This creates the distinctive advantage of the open-ear design of bone conduction headphones. But are they worth buying?
Bone conduction is not a new concept – it was the basis for enhancing sound among those with hearing loss for decades before the invention of the electronic hearing aid. I first tried Aftershokz products almost a decade ago at a sporting goods convention.
The Aeropex is the latest in a long line of Aftershokz products, indeed the first set I possessed used a 3.5mm jack plug. All but one of Aftershokz line-up are now Bluetooth. The exception is the Xtrainerz model which stores up to 4GB of MP3 audio locally to allow for use while swimming. All others receive Bluetooth signals from paired devices – typically a smartphone.
The Aeropex are extremely lightweight – 26g (around an ounce) – and wrap around your head and arch over the ears to place the transducers on your cheek bones. In use, they are extremely comfortable – much more so for me than in-ear TWS or wired ear buds, which I find irritating and all too liable to fall out. I often forget I am wearing them, and find them on my head hours after turning off music or other audio. I sometimes wear glasses too, and this presents little problem – the arms of the glasses lay over the top of the arms of the headset and, if anything, slightly enhance the sound transfer. The only comfort issue is if using them while sitting in a chair with a headrest because the wrap around band can push the transducers off your cheek bones. However it’s usually possible to find a way to position the band so this doesn’t happen.
The main purpose for wanting to use bone conducting, open-ear, Aftershokz headphones is for running. I run quite a bit. Sometimes near to or on roads, but mostly on trails. While running on roads I need to be aware of traffic. And on trails, I love to hear the sounds of nature, and other trail users, such as bikers, are much less likely to take me by surprise.
These are the third generation of Aftershokz headphones I’ve used. After the wired ones, I got a pair of the company’s Trekz Titanium, which were good, but the Aeropex are much better. The sound is not going to rival over-the-ear headphones such as my Bose QC35 or Sony WH-1000XM3. But I find them better and more comfortable than either my Jabra T65 Elite Sport or first generation Apple Airpods. I think with my Jabra earbuds, I cannot get a good fit despite trying multiple variations of tips and wings. This means sound leaks leading to a relatively tinny audio reproduction.
While the Aftershokz Aeropex are not going to win awards for stunning high fidelity because the bone conduction process tends to lose bass frequencies, the sound is much better than you would expect. And you can enjoy the marvellous experience of listening to Vaughn William’s Lark Ascending, while simultaneously listening to actual skylarks trilling high in the sky. Mid-range frequencies are faithfully reproduced and the sound is well-modulated with vocals having a warmth that belies the lack of deep bass. Drums and treble frequencies are decently crisp. And the Aeropex do a much better job of isolating the feeling of vibrations on the cheek bones that was noticeable with the Trekz Titanium – especially at higher volumes.
However, although I do use the Aeropex for music, I mainly use them to listen to audiobooks and podcasts. They are perfect for this and I am able to consume mountains of books and hours of podcasts while out running in the hills.
They have dual noise-cancelling mics that allow for good voice calls; the other party unaware that I am using anything out of the ordinary to conduct the call.
In terms of volume, it is possible to have volume quite loud – loud enough to obliterate most ambient sound. I tend to find myself opting for a mid-level volume that provides a good balance between clearly hearing the audio feed while still being able to hear ambient sound. An example from a recent run. I was jogging down a trail listening to a podcast. I heard a quiet crunch of gravel and turned to see a mountain biker approaching from behind me. Had I been wearing TWS, I would likely have been completely unaware he was there. This ability to hear what is going on around you is important. In many athletic events, participants are not allowed to use earphones and face disqualification if they do; the reasoning being that they will not be able to hear instructions given by marshals. However, open ear designs, like the Aftershokz Aeropex, are allowed.
At medium volume there is not much sound leakage, but at higher volumes people sitting nearby in a quiet environment may be able to hear some sound from the transducers.
On more practical matters, the lithium polymer battery is rated for eight hours continuous playback. I have not timed it but it does last well. Charging via a magnetic induction cable is easy and while not swift at two hours, is fine for charging overnight, which is what I typically do. The headphones are IP67 rated, so will withstand a drenching and even immersion in water, but the Bluetooth connection will not penetrate into H2O, so they’re not suitable for use while swimming – the Xtrainerz model is designed for that.
The controls are fairly minimal. The power button serves to raise volume and, if held for several seconds, will induce the pairing mode. There is an adjacent volume-lowering button. On the outer surface of the left transducer is a button that functions to pause/restart/skip. The simplicity of the design means the controls are easy to learn; I find the controls on my Jabra confusing and often need to take them out of my ears to look at the markings on the tiny buttons.
Aeropex is Aftershok’s top-of-the-range model and costs around $160, which is relatively expensive compared to many TWS products. Other bone conduction models with a similar-looking design are available from other brands, and many are considerably cheaper. However, I have not had the chance to use them, so can’t comment on their quality.
In summary, I am a fan of the Aftershokz Aeropex and have recommended them to many people. But with caveats. If you’re a runner or need a hearable where you also need to hear what’s going on around you for whatever reason – for example in a work situation, then the Aeropex should be considered. In this context, they’re excellent and provide a good overall experience. But for audiophiles or for users who don’t need to hear ambient sound, other options may be preferable.
More and more TWS now offer active sound management – for example, noise cancellation and the ability to pass through sound from the environment. These reduce the distinct advantage of the open-ear design, but there remains a big difference between the ability to truly hear what is going on around you and the sound that is filtered through the digital signal processor in a pair of TWS ear buds.
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]]>The post Augmented Reality: It's Tough in Reality appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>A few years ago, I chatted with a former Atheer CEO. He said the overriding challenge in hardware was the optics. We at Counterpoint believe this continues to be one of the most difficult aspects of developing AR glasses and one that no one seems to have managed to crack yet. Magic Leap is the ‘poster child’ for the difficulty in making AR work. It was determined to develop its own, unique waveguide, but ended up consuming billions of dollars and almost going bust.
Unsurprisingly, the BOSE solution was based on audio rather than visual augmentation. Though a novel approach, it didn’t garner enough interest to make it commercially viable. And after key personnel left and the downturn caused by COVID-19 hit home, BOSE is withdrawing from the initiative. The concept was reasonable – using audio to enhance something someone is already doing. For example, navigating through a city or working out in the gym. But these can be accomplished just as well using regular hearables paired with a smartphone or smartwatch.
BOSE’s departure leaves very few players continuing to push ahead in consumer-orientated AR wearable devices. The one with the highest expectations is Apple. It is expected to announce something soon, but precisely when remains unclear. Tim Cook has spoken of the potential of AR many times, and some sort of eyewear has been in development for several years. But we suspect it’s the pesky optics that will be causing Apple the most headaches. The current most likely timeline points to an announcement in 2021 with the product becoming available the following year. The most likely format will be for the glasses to work in concert with an iPhone – the phone delivering computational power and potentially electrical power as well. The glasses will effectively act as an additional screen and house various sensors to enable surface detection, hand tracking and possibly object recognition, although this is computationally intensive. ARKit, which has been available for several years, will be the basis for application development for the glasses.
Chinese company Nreal, which was founded by people who left Magic Leap, is ahead of Apple but following a similar path, though in its case it is confining itself to the Android smartphone environment. Nreal glasses plug into compatible Android phones for power and computational resources. This simple approach – using the glasses as a second screen for an existing device – is relatively modest in scope, but is the lowest-risk way forward. Nreal supports Unity and Unreal Engine for application development and is looking at both consumer and enterprise options.
Consumer AR remains challenging and we struggle to conceive of truly compelling applications that will overcome consumers’ reticence about wearing glasses – an extremely image altering addition. But in the enterprise, AR is already proving its worth. Applications supporting diverse sectors like field force, construction and healthcare are already benefiting from AR devices – companies such as Vuzix have been performing well here.
Microsoft continues to gently push ahead with Hololens. But the devices are not without challenge to use given their size, weight and somewhat delicate nature that is incompatible with construction sites, for example. This means many of the most widely deployed AR use cases continue to be through screen – that is holding up a tablet or smartphone to see the enhanced view via the device’s camera and mediating software.
AR and VR are often cited as technologies that will be revolutionized by 5G. We can support this idea conceptually, but the near term reality is much less exciting and continues to be a hard, slow slog for the remaining players in the game. The AR revolution is inching closer, but it may still be a few years before it’s a commercial reality.
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]]>The post February 2020: Global Smartphone Sales Show Resilience with a 14% Decline appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>Hong Kong, Seoul, London, Beijing, San Diego, New Delhi, Buenos Aires, Taipei – March 25th, 2020
As COVID-19, unfortunately, spreads like wildfire around the globe, its impact on the technology industry is unprecedented. The global February smartphone sales, as a result, showed weakness, but the decline was no more than 14% lower than February 2019; not as bad as the industry had feared.
However China, the initial epicenter of the epidemic, did show a huge 38% decline, but is showing signs of a rebound already. Overall, global smartphone sales in February showed weakness in many markets as consumers became cautious. But with the growth of online channels, we saw sales shifting from offline to online. Offline sales in China fell more than 50% during February. But this fall was partially offset with stronger online sales, so the overall drop at 38%, was not so severe.
Sell-in shipments, which represents the supply of smartphones, were relatively weaker, but February is a traditional low period for production, especially if it coincides with the Chinese New Year as was the case this year. Comparing with a year ago, sell-in shipments fell 18%, though again, less bad than the industry feared.
VP and Research Director, Peter Richardson, commenting on the smartphone demand-supply landscape and outlook, “The global smartphone market is largely a replacement market, meaning that smartphones are a discretionary purchase. Nevertheless, they are now seen as a vital part of daily life – especially so for those enduring extended periods of isolation or remote working. So while people may delay purchasing due to the coronavirus pandemic, especially in the early part of the crisis when the disruption and uncertainty are both high, they will still replace their smartphone at some point. This means that sales will not be entirely lost – just delayed.”
In terms of the competitive landscape, the demand for Samsung smartphones remained stable due to the minimum exposure to the Chinese supply chain and China market demand, thus, capturing 22% global smartphone market share in terms of sales volumes. Apple felt some impact from the supply-side during the month both in China in early February and outside of China in the latter half of the month which affected its sales performance. However, Huawei which has maximum exposure to China from both supply and demand perspectives, actually performed well above expectations, selling more than 12 million smartphones during February, seeing just a 1% drop in global market share.
Jene Park, Senior Analyst at Counterpoint, commenting on the impact outside China, noted, “While China and South Korea are gradually recovering, the worst is far from over for many other parts of the world. The coronavirus pandemic is unprecedented in nature and scale, but there are historical parallels we can learn from and these give us confidence that the mobile communications sector can ride-out this storm without too much damage in the longer term.”
To register for our upcoming webinar on the “COVID-19 Coronavirus Impact on the Smartphone Market”, click here
Background:
Counterpoint Technology Market Research is a global research firm specializing in Technology products in the TMT industry. It services major technology firms and financial firms with a mix of monthly reports, customized projects and detailed analysis of the mobile and technology markets.
The Market Pulse is a monthly report gathering sales data from more than 60 countries around the globe. More than 40 analysts work on the analysis of the smartphone industry across seven countries including China, Taiwan, Korea, USA, India, UK, Argentina, and HK. Counterpoint’s senior team comes from technology firms such as NEC, Panasonic, Nokia, Samsung, LG, Vivo, China Mobile, TSMC, Intel, Microsoft, Ford and more.
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]]>Nevertheless, the company is still launching new products… or at least revised versions of existing products.
Huawei is continuing with its 1+8+N product strategy. The ‘1’ refers to the smartphone, which it sees as the pivotal device. The ‘8’ refers to adjacent devices such as PCs, wearables, tablet devices, audio devices and even cars. The ‘N’ refers to the innumerable IoT devices that will increasingly form a background hum of low-power connected devices.
This round of product launches features one smartphone and a few from the ‘8’.
A revision of the Mate X launched a year ago, the Mate Xs, which now includes the HiSilicon Kirin 990 5G chipset. The hinge and display have undergone a redesign claimed to make them more robust. The design is amazing – the outwardly folding display allows for both sides of the device to be active (in certain states) when the device is closed, but the user interface seamlessly resizes when opened.
That same UI allows for some apps to be run side-by-side in resizable windows for multi-tasking.
However, the outwardly folding screen means the screen is vulnerable to damage unless placed inside a case. We noted that one of the demo devices already had scratches on the surface of the display, despite Huawei adding additional layers to the screen.
Cameras are now the same as the Mate 30 Pro’s, which are excellent. But the lack of GMS is also like the Mate 30 Pro, which is far from excellent. This means the product is likely more or less unsalable outside of China.
Samsung is already iterating the folding form factor towards a clam shell design, in the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip. While it is continuing with the Galaxy Fold for now, we are likely to see further, necessary, iteration in the folding form factor before this style of device settles into something mainstream. The original Mate X was, arguably, a far better design than Samsung’s Galaxy Fold. However the clam shell design of the Z Flip has a lot of positives – inherent screen protection and buyer familiarity for two. That Huawei is still refining the outwardly folding, and vulnerable, Mate X design suggests that it sees a future in this form factor – we’re less certain.
Huawei has had a notable series of tablet devices that have done well in a lackluster market. It is introducing the ‘Mate’ nomenclature to the tablet line-up (instead of MediaPad) and is equipping its new tablet device with the same Kirin 990 chipset for 5G connectivity. The display to body ratio is around 90%, which means the bezels are narrow. To avoid the misinterpretation of touching the display by merely holding the device, Huawei has developed the UI so that it disregards these ‘false positives’. In a brief hands-on trial, it worked well, though wasn’t completely foolproof.
Huawei is using the same UI capability as on the Mate Xs, called App Multiplier, to allow apps to be run side-by-side, resized, stretched etc. It claims there are thousands of apps currently capable of supporting App Multiplier with more in the works. It was notable that many, but not all, the apps shown in the demos were Chinese, which suggests that Huawei has Chinese developers on-side, likely through the Huawei AppGallery program, but far fewer non-Chinese developers.
The MatePad Pro has an attachable keyboard and a pen that recharges when attached, magnetically, to the top of the device. Incidentally, the MatePad Pro can also wirelessly reverse charge other devices from its capacious 7250mAH battery.
Huawei’s rise to prominence in smartphones was coincident with its partnership with Leica. We think the Leica deal was a significant factor in Huawei’s success. As the company is now pushing beyond the smartphone it is trying to find the key to unlock other high potential markets. It has achieved modest success with a smartwatch and has several true wireless audible products on the market. The next sector in Huawei’s sights is the home audio market. In its attempt here, it has partnered with a French hi-end audio company called Devialet that counts Jay-Z among its shareholders. Devialet has co-engineered the new product with Huawei. The speaker itself is a squat device, weighing in at 3.5kg yet packs a tremendous audio punch, thanks to dual woofers and six tweeters. The synchronized, back-to-back or so-called, push-push, woofer design means that the speaker can generate high sound pressure levels with little vibration. The product is likely to be priced around the same as the Apple HomePod.
In China, we understand the Sound X is equipped with Huawei’s own Xiaoyi voice assistant, Huawei HiLink smart home control, and support for Huawei music. Outside of China these are less likely to be of interest. Nevertheless, the audio quality alone makes the Sound X a compelling proposition. But in a market awash with strong competitors, it would be surprising if Huawei was to make much of an impact.
The other Huawei products being announced are refreshed versions of its laptop PCs. These again are well-designed products, but ones undermined by the ongoing trade embargo with the US. But again, weirdly and inexplicably, they don’t have cellular connectivity. For a company that sees logic in equipping a tablet device with a 5G modem, to entirely forego cellular connectivity in its PC line-up continues to strike us as odd.
Huawei’s isolation by the US will likely continue indefinitely. The isolation caused by COVID-19 is showing some positive signs, but it’s too early to call an end to the outbreak within the next few weeks. Should either type of isolation come to an end, Huawei will regain ground, but at a very much reduced level to where it otherwise would have been.
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]]>The post Huawei to Play a Limited Role in UK 5G appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>The UK government has always considered Huawei a ‘high-risk vendor’, but continues to believe that the risk of using Huawei equipment is manageable, provided its role is limited and that it is not allowed in sensitive parts of the network or country. The UK has, for many years, required Huawei to pay for a laboratory where Huawei’s equipment is carefully tested to assess its level of security threat. It has not been able to find anything that resembles a ‘back-door’ that would allow, for example, the Chinese government to intercept sensitive communications. It has, however, found considerable security vulnerabilities in the quality of Huawei’s software and cyber-security measures. In response, Huawei said it would invest two billion dollars to tighten the level of security. Nevertheless, concerns are less about Chinese government eavesdropping and more to do with the potential for a rogue actor to take down communications networks, partially or completely. Given the fundamental role that 5G will one day play in connecting much of daily life, this poses a threat that needs to be managed.
However while the UK government pondered the decision, three out of the the UK’s four mobile network operators had already started rolling out their 5G networks using Huawei infrastructure. This is unsurprising as Huawei is also a supplier of many 4G networks and there’s a synergy in using the same provider for both systems. Indeed, one of Huawei’s advantages in its approach to 5G is its ability to pair aspects of both 4G and 5G to drive faster and more cost-efficient deployments. Network operators have been vocal in their desire to keep Huawei as a supplier, citing issues of technology superiority and cost. If Huawei would have been prevented from participating in 5G, operators claimed it would have resulted in delays to network roll-outs of several years and substantial increases in cost.
Lobbying from telecom operators has likely been multiplied by lobbying from inside Huawei; several former members of the UK government now serve in various roles within Huawei, including Lord Browne – who is Chairman of Huawei UK.
The decision will have come as a relief for Huawei; other countries were observing the UK and are likely to follow its lead. But the relief is likely only partial because its continued identification as a high-risk vendor means it will struggle for the sort of market position it might otherwise have enjoyed.
And while the decision delivers some clarity on Huawei’s future role, there are aspects that will need to be handled carefully. One being how to define exactly what constitutes the core of the network. To deliver the benefits that 5G promises, more and more of the core functionality of the network will be distributed closer to the edge of the network, where Huawei will likely be allowed to play a role. And mixing different vendors’ solutions may limit the extent to which a network can realize the full capabilities of 5G. In practice, the restrictions outlined will likely limit Huawei to participating only in the radio access network (RAN). And some operators may have already exceeded the 35% rule and will need to plot a course to reducing their dependence on Huawei within the next three years.
Ericsson, Nokia and Samsung will be pleased that Huawei’s hands have been tied, but it’s perhaps less than they might have been hoping for. There is no relief for ZTE, which is effectively banned from the UK.
The UK government has been wrestling with a complex strategic calculation. Its closest ally is the USA, which has been pushing hard for an outright ban on the use of Huawei equipment. The UK has also likely been trying to keep China at least partially on-side. The uncomfortable truth is that it will need to forge trade agreements with both nations following Brexit. It is gambling that this conditional acceptance of Huawei will be enough to mollify Beijing without completely distancing the US. It may not have managed either.
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]]>The post IFA2019 – Mid-Range Smartphones Get Some Much-Needed Attention appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>Mid-range is 40% of volume
Products with a wholesale price of between US$200 and US$800 account for ~40% of global volume. Even markets like the US, which has traditionally been split between high-end and low-end, is now seeing growth in mid-range price bands.
5G arriving fast to mid-range
With 150 designs already underway, or launched, Qualcomm is the undisputed 5G leader. One of the key announcements at IFA was delivered during Qualcomm’s keynote address by company President, Christiano Amon. He revealed that 5G capabilities are coming to its Snapdragon 7 and 6 series starting in 2020. These are mid-range application processors used to power many of the products that form the 40% of volume. And while 5G devices built around these processors will likely be more costly than non-5G versions, they will also fall solidly within the mid-range.
Huawei – 5G powerhouse, that’s losing its power
Richard Yu gave one of his typically upbeat presentations where he announced two key products – the Kirin 990 5G SoC and the Kirin A1 which is designed for wearables. Huawei claims it’s the first Bluetooth and Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) chip to support version 5.1.
The Kirin 990 is a powerhouse chipset based on the TSMC 7nm FinFet + EUV process. It incorporates the modem to provide a single chip solution – though only for sub-6GHz frequency ranges for now, though it does support both Non-Standalone (NSA) and Standalone (SA) 5G network types.
Huawei joins with Samsung that launched the Exynos 980 single-chip solution, and will likely be outflanked by Qualcomm’s forthcoming Snapdragon 865.
Huawei Kirin 990 5G SoC
However, Huawei continued to ignore the massive elephant in the room that will likely crush Huawei’s consumer business – the trade ban by the US that means its next product – the Mate 30, that will be powered by the Kirin 990, likely won’t launch, natively, with Google’s GMS services, forcing consumers to have to side-load the services. It also means that the operating system will not be supported with updates and security patches throughout the product life. For many consumers and many operators, this will be too difficult to contemplate buying the product. We, therefore, expect that Huawei will continue to suffer share losses in the market.
Huawei’s misfortune opens door
As Huawei suffers a traumatic loss of market share, it opens the door to others to take advantage of the vacuum it creates.
HMD Nokia has been flat-lining in market share terms in the smartphone market. It has done well in feature phones, but while that’s good, the market for feature phones will inevitably gradually decline, so it’s crucial that its smartphone business flourishes.
HMD Nokia launched two new smartphones as updates to its 6 and 7 series – the 6.2 and 7.2.
Both include innovative technology from Pixelworks that efficiently upscales content to HD on the fly. This means that the products can be spec’d with cost-efficient screens and application processors (a Snapdragon 636 on the Nokia 6.2 and a Snapdragon 660 on the 7.2) but deliver performance equivalent to more costly products. Both also sport triple-camera setups with the 7.2 getting a 1/2 inch 48-megapixel sensor.
Pricing for the 6.2 starts at €199 with the 7.2 starting at €299.
HMD Nokia emphasised its lead in updating software and security based on the research conducted by Counterpoint Research.
In addition to the smartphones, HMD Nokia also introduced three new feature phones – a market where it leads by a considerable margin already. The new products will help it tighten its stranglehold on the feature phone space:
The Nokia 110 – a cute basic 2G feature phone based on enhanced Series 30 operating system.
The Nokia 2720 – a flip phone smart feature phone with 4G LTE capability and running on KaiOS with essential apps for many markets including Facebook and WhatsApp preloaded. An emergency button is also included which means that the 2720 could be aimed at the elders market to compete with offerings from companies like Doro, though the emergency button is quite small.
The Nokia 800 Tough – Nokia feature phones are well-known for their ability to withstand harsh treatment, but the 800 Tough goes several steps further. It’s a ruggedized smart feature phone running KaiOS and built to MIL 810G standard. It also has a remarkable battery life. On GSM, Nokia claims it will last almost six weeks between charges. For expeditions that may have limited access to power, this could be a lifesaver, though the market for builders and other laborers is much larger than those of explorers!
TCL takes a swing at the smartphone market
TCL is best known globally for its TV business in North America, but it offers a diverse range of consumer electronics products that span domestic appliances, air conditioners, TVs, audio products, to smartphones. TCL licenses the Alcatel and BlackBerry brands, which have carved out specific niche positions – notably Alcatel that performs quite well in the prepaid markets of the Americas. But the Alcatel brand has never had the muscle to fight in the affordable premium and premium segments. This is where the TCL brand is being mobilized.
Its initial smartphone product is the TCL Plex. It’s a well-executed mid-range smartphone. Interestingly, it also runs the Pixelworks technology that HMD Nokia is using. Here Pixelworks helps TCL’s own display technology to really shine, with excellent color reproduction.
The Plex also has a triple camera set-up, which is almost now table stakes in the mid-range.
TCL has good organizational structures in many parts of the world in which its Chinese rivals are only just now establishing. This means it has a head start in some respects, but the brand is unknown in the smartphone market in Europe and many parts of Asia. And given that it will only launch in markets where operators are not heavily in control, means that it won’t launch in the US, UK, and a few other key markets – preferring to work with open market retailers.
TCL flashed a look at a folding concept, though played down the speed with which it will bring a device to market. It also showed an augmented reality headset concept – again with no specific plans to bring it to market.
TCL faces a considerable task to establish a beachhead in the market. But its challenges are mostly around marketing, distribution and brand than execution of good hardware.
Moto – Camera to the fore
Motorola’s One Zoom is the next iteration in the Moto One series (that also includes the One, One Power, One Vision, and One Action). As the name implies, this model is leading with its telephoto camera capabilities. The phone sports a four-camera set-up on the back with standard, telephoto, wide-angle and a ToF depth sensor. These are paired with an OLED display and powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 675 chipset and running stock Android 9. Pricing is around €400. The design is not to everyone’s taste, but the materials and finish are to a high standard.
Sony: didn’t get the memo about mid-range
Sony launched the Xperia 5, a flagship device with pricing likely above €800. Running on the Snapdragon 855 application processor, with a 21:9 aspect ratio 6.1” OLED FHD+ display, it’s a surprisingly compact device that acts as a smaller version of the Xperia 1, launched in February.
However, we doubt the Xperia 5 will do much to rekindle Sony’s dismal sales figures. With a wide range of excellent competitor devices from a variety of OEMs, mostly at much more attractive price points, Sony will likely struggle to gain traction even with the help provided by Huawei’s current misfortune.
Samsung: an unfolding story
Samsung’s ill-fated Galaxy Fold has been under wraps since the problems surfaced back in the spring. Samsung has been working on several improvements, such as small retention covers to prevent careless users from peeling off the top layer of the screen. And the gaps that allowed small particles of material to enter under the screen have been closed. In addition, the hinge mechanism now feels much sturdier than it did. This may be subjective and may also vary between units, but it now feels mechanically robust.
In addition to the outward hardware changes, Samsung is now offering the Galaxy Fold in both 4G and 5G versions, though it’s not clear what the pricing differential will be between the two or which markets will get which versions.
The device is definitely a work of mechanical art, but whether it’s worth the massive price premium is less clear. The advantages in terms of additional screen real estate come at a high price – both financially but also in terms of bulk and fragility. We expect the Galaxy Fold, and other folding form factor devices, will remain of niche interest for early adopters, for now.
Hearables are go
One of the other trends evident at IFA was the burgeoning availability of true wireless earbuds with updates and new releases from multiple vendors: including Huawei, Jabra, Plantronics, Nokia HMD and TCL.
Huawei’s launch of its Freebuds 3 was significant because they’re based on the new Kirin A1 chip. Outwardly they look similar to Apple’s Airpods, but their features set them apart. Despite having an open ear design, they offer active noise cancellation (ANC). They also feature bone-conduction technology to enhance microphone sensitivity as well as a wind deflector so they can be used while outside or even when cycling at up to 20km/h.
We couldn’t try the wind deflecting capabilities, but we did try music and they sounded good, with noticeably better audio quality than Apple’s Airpods. However, expect Apple to update its own Airpods within the next few months to raise the bar higher again.
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]]>The post 5G Infrastructure – Share More, Plan Less appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>China Telecom and China Unicom are actively considering sharing infrastructure. China Mobile may also join them; especially for networks in rural areas where the return on investment calculations are harder to justify than in urban settings. The three Chinese operators co-own a tower company, China Tower Corp, so some of the groundwork has already been laid. China Tower Corp has said it has received requests to install 65,000 5G base stations so far – a number it expects to exceed 100,000 by the year end.
China Unicom has said that sharing infrastructure can result in capex savings of between $28 billion and $38 billion — though at least part of those savings represent lost revenue for infrastructure vendors that have been holding out for the 5G spending bonanza. This indicates that the total spend may be considerably less than would otherwise be the case if all operators built their own networks.
In the UK, all four operators have established some form of infrastructure sharing. 3 UK (owned by CK Hutchison) formed a joint venture with T-Mobile (now EE) called Mobile Broadband Network Limited (MBNL). Separately, Vodafone and O2 have a jointly owned company called Cornerstone. Vodafone and O2 are are adding 5G to their existing shared infrastructure. This is a logical move as it minimizes the roll-out costs of the new technology and accelerates time to market – especially in less dense suburban and rural areas that are costly to cover. At the same time, they are providing for greater autonomy in urban areas, where the usage is most intense and therefore offers the greatest return for differentiated offerings. They may open Cornerstone to additional investors that will allow Vodafone and O2 to, partially, monetize their existing investments.
Mobile operators have tended to compete on the basis of network coverage and quality – exemplified by Verizon Wireless’ ‘Can you hear me now?’ advertising campaign of a few years ago. 5G will be no different; we are already seeing competitive shots being fired, with 3 UK claiming it is the only true 5G service provider in the UK, thanks to its 100MHz of contiguous spectrum. The moves toward more infrastructure sharing may not be smooth – but they do make sense in some circumstances. 5G services however, promise to be more complex and diverse than anything we’ve seen before – enabled by the capacity and speed of the technology – and by the increasing use of distributed computing capabilities through things like mobile edge computing (MEC), that will be key to delivering the ultra-low latency services expected in 5G.
In a separate move, the UK government has opened a consultation on whether to allow higher cell towers to be built without additional planning consent being required. The current legislation limits towers to 25 meters. Higher towers can be used to extend coverage in rural areas – and can carry more kit, though the size of antenna systems is tending to shrink with the latest developments.
Other industries often share infrastructure and compete on customer-facing service provision. Mobile network operators are no stranger to this; MVNOs effectively share the infrastructure of the host operators and compete in the provision of service. The most extreme step on this path would be the formation of a single national ‘Net Co’ that would be responsible for building a single wholesale network (SWN) to be used by all operators. It has been tried in a few markets – especially to provide service in areas that would otherwise not be covered, but they’ve not been successful. We expect the SWN model will not be used in 5G, but various forms of infrastructure sharing will increasingly be the norm.
If you would like to talk about 5G with us, Counterpoint’s Neil Shah will be attending the 5G Leadership Summit in Mumbai on August 30th. Follow the link to schedule a meeting with Neil.
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]]>The post Dancing in the Dark – Huawei P30 Series Launch appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>The standout feature of the P30 is, unsurprisingly, the photographic performance – here it builds on the class leading performance of its predecessor, the P20.
The P30 Pro offers the premium experience within the P30 family. It has three optical cameras plus a Time of Flight (TOF) sensor. The camera set up has a 40MPx main sensor with an f1.6 aperture and a new colour sensor that instead of the standard RGB set-up uses a RYYB filter structure. The dual yellow filters in the quad-pixel array can interpret red light, green light and yellow light. Huawei claims this improves the amount of light reaching the sensor by 40%. Huawei calls it Super-Spectrum.
The second camera has an ultra-wide angle lens with a 20MPx sensor; familiar from the Mate 20.
The third camera is a periscope 125mm telephoto lens paired with an 8MPx sensor. This offers 5x optical zoom and 10x hybrid zoom. When pushed to extremes though, it produces an astonishing 50x digital zoom.
In brief tests the zoom worked extremely well. The pictures below were taken from the same position and shift from wide-angle through 5x zoom, to 10x, to around 30x zoom.
Low light and video performance are also dramatic thanks to a combination of the RYYB filters, wide apertures, powerful image signal processing, and AI-mediated scene identification, enabled within the Kirin 980 application processor that includes dual NPUs and dual ISPs. Huawei claim an ISO equivalent of over 400,000. This means that pictures can be taken in almost zero light with startling effectiveness. The shot on the left below was taken with the iPhone Xs, and is a pretty faithful representation of the light level. The picture on the right was taken with the P30 Pro. Despite appearances, there was no change in light levels in the room between the two shots. Yes, really!
One aspect that Huawei highlighted was the ability to shoot video simultaneously in both normal view as well as telephoto. A use-case could be videoing a football game where the overall scene is captured but action is also caught close-up. It’s a neat trick, but we doubt it will get a lot of use.
Screens are all OLED with sizes ranging from 6.47” in the Pro to 6.1” in the P30. Both have 19.5:1 aspect ratios and in-screen fingerprint technology. Huawei has resisted using 2K screens, opting for 1080p, which it has done, it says, for reasons of battery economy. The screens are good but not stunningly sharp. The Pro has a more radiused screen that slides off the edge of the device, while the standard P30 screen is flat. To achieve as full a screen as possible, both devices have a tear drop cut out that houses the 32MPx selfie camera.
Huawei is removing the standard front firing loudspeaker from the Pro and instead is using the screen as a speaker by making the surface vibrate. This was seen first on the Xiaomi Mi Mix where it didn’t work well. Huawei claims its technology is superior and provides ample sound without leakage. It is a technology that Counterpoint foresaw in our report on audio developments – see here.
Battery and charging are class-leading with Huawei’s branded super-charging as standard. The P30 Pro also gets wireless charging and can reverse charge other capable devices, as with the Mate 20 Pro and the Samsung S10 – indeed I was able to give my iPhone a boost from the P30 Pro.
Designs are, as with the recent Huawei launches, excellent. The colors, materials, and finishes are outstanding, with some striking color options.
Huawei will introduce 5G in a version of the Mate 20, later this year, as well as the folding Mate X. It’s unlikely that the P30 will get a 5G upgrade, though Huawei has not completely ruled it out.
Both products are available from today in selected markets – though not the USA; their loss. Pricing starts at Eur 799 for the P30 and ranges up to Eur 1249 for the P30 Pro with 8GB of RAM and 512GB of ROM storage. Most buyers will likely opt for the Eur 1049 8GB/256GB
The P30 series raises an already high bar. It now joins its sister Mate 20 series and the Samsung S10 series as the outstanding smartphones of the year. However, we doubt the average smartphone user will be rushing to the stores to buy the product in the current environment of innovation fatigue, especially given that Huawei is taking advantage of the opportunity to raise pricing into the headroom that Apple has created.
In competitive terms, Huawei is now fully a match for Samsung in smartphone hardware. And it is Huawei that Samsung should be worrying about – rather than continuing to chase Apple. Apple meanwhile has signalled with its latest launches that hardware is merely a vehicle for delivering a gradually improving services experience. The lack of ambition evidenced by its so-so annual device upgrades suggests it doesn’t feel the need to chase best-in-class hardware – see here.
One of the most striking things about the launch presentation was a video with the senior handset buyers of Telefonica, Vodafone and Orange that all made strong statements committing their respective firms to deeper partnerships with Huawei. Striking because it comes against a background where some buyers were thought to be put-off by the continuing concerns over Huawei’s ability to withstand mounting US-driven pressure. These operators, at least, don’t seem to have got that memo. And if the Huawei run rate in Europe continues, it will close the gap on Samsung still further during 2019.
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]]>The post MWC Day 0 : Part 1 :: Welcome to the Advanced Imaging, 5G & Foldable Future appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>Most of the announcements/launches were around flagship devices circling around three main themes — 5G, foldable form-factor, and cameras/imaging.
OPPO
OPPO had a special “OPPO Innovation Event” showcasing its worth in two areas Camera and 5G. OPPO unveiled the world’s first smartphone with “10x lossless optical zoom” to be launched in Q2 2019. OPPO is using a special three camera sensor setup which smartly switches between the ultra-wide sensor to 48MP mid-range to a specially crafted telephoto sensor and lens array to deliver a 10x lossless zoom. The secret sauce is in the algorithms and the special design of the telephoto lens which sports a periscope design with a prism to enable multiple factor zoom.
OPPO with this camera technology aims to build some unique differentiation in the tougher premium space to compete with likes of Apple, Huawei, Samsung, and Google. Camera is the key focus area for flagship phones, the relative contribution of the camera to the overall Bill of Materials has gone up from 5% a few years ago to 13% in 2018.
Another area OPPO is looking to continue to innovate along with the camera and AI is 5G. OPPO announced a US$1.5 billion R&D investment and aims to launch its first 5G handset in early H2 2019. OPPO actually commenced its 5G research in 2015 and since then had more than 2,000 technical submissions to the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP). OPPO now has six research divisions and four R&D centers to drive this investment.
Huawei – Industry Leading Design & Impeccable Time To Market
Huawei launched a refreshed Matebook X Pro PC, but the real excitement was for the Mate X – its 5G folding smartphone that, in one hit, eclipsed all rivals. Its so-called falcon wing hinge is a work of mechanical genius. Huawei’s overall design seems well-thought out. However, we are yet to be convinced about both the hinge and the screen’s long-term durability. We are also still to be convinced that the use case for a folding phone is strong enough to offset the inevitable compromises.
One of the main compromises is the UI in folding devices – not just Huawei’s. Android has not been optimized for folding devices and this was evident from the on-stage demo from Richard Yu, who had to do more juggling than is usually the case with new phone launches.
But of the folding devices so far announced, Huawei has set the highest bar not just in its design and engineering but also with its price. At US$2,299 it is even more expensive than Samsung’s already loftily-priced (US$1,980) Samsung Galaxy Fold – though the Samsung device is not, initially, 5G and Huawei has included a higher memory configuration (8GB/512GB) with a better design.
For foldable phones, as a first step, it is all about designing the hinge. Huawei has assembled more than 100 components to design the foldable hinge called “Falcon Wing” allowing a stretchable and thinner design. This design approach allows a 360-degree rotation, enabling full back-to-back fold unlike what we have seen in other designs from Samsung or Royole.
The side bar design also is cleverly designed for a nice grip while holding it in open 8″ mode and it also houses the 5G sub-6 GHz antenna. The massive 4500 mAh battery is distributed discretely into each of the sides of the two display.
In addition to the Mate X, Huawei also announced an updated and much neater 5G CPE device – with both indoor and outdoor variants. And a 5G MiFi type device. We fully expect that the forthcoming P30 series will include at least one 5G variant.
Huawei’s PCs – Purposeful Products
As with its smartphones, Huawei looks closely at competitors and then iterates its products while focusing on a number of key performance factors. This results in products that are extremely competitive on most performance metrics that consumers care about: battery life and charging speed, screen size and aspect ratio, computing and graphics power. It goes a few steps further though with the use of a compact charging apparatus that makes the typical bricks that accompany most PCs look ridiculously cumbersome.
New for the Matebook and Matebook X Pro is a feature called One Hop that takes advantage of the growing capability of Huawei’s EMUI software. Huawei Share One Hop allows content such as photos, videos, clipboard taken with Huawei smartphones to be rapidly and seamlessly shared with the PC and vice versa. This also applies to documents. While a useful feature, it only works between Huawei PCs and smartphones with EMUI version 9.1 – likely to arrive with the P30 Pro in a few weeks. This seamless hand-off of content seamlessly across devices reduces a huge pain-point for mobile workers and power users and can increase stickiness for users to use multiple Huawei products similar to synergies between Apple MacBook and iPhones.
And while Huawei’s PCs are good, they still don’t support native cellular connectivity; something that should be a distinctive advantage for Huawei. While it’s true to say that relatively few people choose and use cellular capable PCs, Huawei could have offered it as an option. With the advent of 5G just around the corner, it makes even more sense to provide connectivity that isn’t reliant on, often insecure, public WiFi hotspots.
HMD – Nokia 9 Pureview Steals the Show
HMD launched a slew of new devices covering an array of price points from US$35 to US$699.
At the lower end, the new Nokia 210 offers an excellent 2.5G feature phone experience based on its S30+ UI. The device includes a version of the Opera-mini browser and support for a few apps including Facebook. At US$35 it is not the cheapest feature phone but should be among the best at that price point – key for many emerging markets.
The Nokia One Plus – at US$99 – hits a key price point for entry smartphones. The design is slick and the operation, based on Android Pie Go edition, is smooth.
The Nokia 3.2 and 4.2, the first ‘four’ series device from Nokia HMD, land in the key US$130 – US$200 price band. Solid if unspectacular designs, but with the unique promise of two years major Android platform updates and monthly security updates. This applies to all of Nokia HMDs Android-based smartphones and is, we think, an under-communicated benefit given that the vast majority of Android smartphones never receive platform updates throughout their life.
The real show-stopper for Nokia HMD is the Nokia 9 Pureview. This has been widely leaked, but what hasn’t been leaked is the quality of the images the device can generate. It has five image sensors (two RGB and three mono) controlled by an image co-processor developed in conjunction with camera-make Light. The multiple sensors allow unsurpassed depth sensing and detail resolution. The creative possibilities are enhanced by being able to shoot in RAW format and edit using a version of Adobe Lightroom that’s included with the Nokia 9 Pureview. The product design is strong and the price competitive at US$699. Given the recent propensity of some Chinese rivals to move into the pricing headroom created by Apple, HMD has been wise not to follow suit. This is especially the case because Xiaomi is the one Chinese player that is racing down the price curve and making waves in Europe as a result.
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]]>The post New Phone, New Logo: Honor View 20 International Launch appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>Honor has been bucking trends. In a global smartphone market that is rocking between tepid growth and shallow decline, Honor stands as one of the few manufacturers growing, and fast; annual growth in 2018 of more than 20%. It has done this with a tight focus on serving its core market segment of millennials with a tight range of products that mix good specifications, well-thought through designs and attractive pricing. It spends relatively little on above-the-line advertising but takes full advantage of the power of social media to manage its marketing efficiently and cost effectively. Social media is, after all, the best way to reach its target audience.
The View 20 launch also served as a platform to reveal a new logo design. Honor is eschewing its lower-case logo in favour of an all caps rendering of its name. It’s also flowing multiple colours through its new logo. Changing a logo is a big decision and Honor will not have made this decision lightly, indeed, we understand it has been talking internally about the change for around two years. It has made the change for typographical and design reasons. For example, in the lower case honor the ‘h’ is higher than all the other letters. This put limits on how the logo could be used. In addition, the lower case honor in written text is difficult to distinguish from other words. We liked the old logo, with its quirky digital flavour. By contrast the new logo looks more corporate. It’s fine, but not particularly distinctive. However, we doubt this modest change will slow HONOR’s progress. And for evidence of that one only has to look at the View 20.
Underneath the attractively designed exterior of the View 20 is virtually the same platform as the Huawei Mate 20. This is no bad thing as the Mate 20 Pro was arguably the best phone launched in 2018. This means the View 20 is rocking the 7nm Kirin 980 chipset with its dual neural processing units, dual ISPs, CAT21 LTE, liquid cooling and a 4000mAH battery with fast charging and much more.
The industrial design is worth focusing on. It’s not quite as slick as the Mate 20 Pro but it is accomplished. The glass back has a nano-lithography treatment that shows-up as a subtle v-shaped design within the coloured glass. Two versions of the product are available; 6GB/128GB base model and the higher capacity 8GB/256GB version, some of which have additional design magic sprinkled on them by fashion house Moschino. Four colour-ways are available from the January 23rd launch.
While the Mate 20 was outfitted with a triple camera module, the View 20 gets only a single camera on the back. But it has a 48Mpix Sony IMX586 sensor – the single largest sensor on a smartphone today. There is what looks like a second camera on the back, but it’s a Time of Flight (TOF) sensor that enables the phone to accomplish some impressive 3D and AR related applications. Some of these will be included at launch, but others will be reliant on developers taking the capability and running with it – something that has happened only modestly in iOS so far, so we’re not convinced Android developers, outside China, will do much with this, though we’d like to be proven wrong.
The front-facing camera is another stand-out feature. This has a 25Mpix Sony sensor set in a 4.5mm diameter ‘punch-hole’, tight in the corner of the display. The punch-hole is the smallest so far managed by any company. Honor has achieved this without piercing the liquid crystal of the LCD display, which, it says, makes it stronger and less likely to fail with rough handling. Honor used LCD for the display because OLED would not have allowed the punch-hole design. One further aspect of this is that the LCDs cannot support under-glass fingerprint sensors, so the View 20’s sensor is on the back of the device. The front facing camera does support facial recognition but only simple facial recognition rather than with structured light as on the Mate 20 Pro and iPhone X-series.
The upside is that the display is more or less edge to edge – achieving almost 92% screen to body ratio in the 6.4” 1080p display. Pixel density is a solid 398 ppi, not class leading but more than adequate.
The front-facing camera has also placed some limitations on other design aspects. For example, the front display glass is flat, without the curved edges that are considered fashionable and used to good effect on the Mate 20 Pro. The issue being that the front-facing camera is positioned very close to the corner of the device. Were the cover glass to be curved it would distort the image.
The Honor View 20 is one of the first flagship launches of 2019. Time will tell where it stacks-up in the list of best-selling phones of the year. It doesn’t tick all the boxes – no IP68 water resistance, no structured light facial recognition and no wireless charging, for example. But it has a lot to recommend it. And with a price of €569 for the 6GB/128GB version, €649 for the 8GB/256GB Moschino edition, good and broadening distribution, there is plenty here to support our view that Honor likely continues to outperform the market average and, other things being equal, gains share in 2019.
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]]>The post Urgent Update to Drone Regulations Needed appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>I recently discussed the state of drone regulations in the UK with someone that had been working closely with the UK’s Civil Aviation Authority (CAA). At the time he was worried that the CAA wasn’t addressing the potential hazards presented by drones sufficiently seriously. His words now seem horribly prescient, but an attack of this type was fully foreseeable, in my view. And the current regulations look hopelessly inadequate.
Many of the more powerful drones have geofencing capabilities installed. These clearly aren’t active in the Gatwick case. The police have so far been unable to locate the drone operator(s) and have taken steps to install military grade drone countermeasures, although these don’t seem to be fully successful and took a long time to bring to bear on the situation.
Recreational drones do not need to be registered in the UK. Their use is subject to an Air Navigation Order (ANO) that sets out a number of legally binding rules that recreational users must adhere to. This includes keeping the drone in line-of-sight, not exceeding 120m in altitude, not flying close to people and not flying near airports. Failure to comply can lead to prison sentences of up to five years. A recreational drone is specified as one weighing less than 20kg, although drones weighing over 7kg and those fitted with cameras have additional requirements under the order.
Commercial drones are covered by the same ANO, but have additional requirements – especially if they need to be allowed to work inside the parameters set out in the ANO such as over-flying crowds or close to buildings.
None of the regulations, as we interpret them, require the drone to be registered or to do anything that easily allows it to be identified with an owner or operator. Given the scale and cost of the damages being wilfully inflicted on Gatwick Airport, we suggest the CAA urgently revises its regulatory stance and proposes changes to existing legislation to make the identification of a drone and its owner compulsory. This can be mandated on drone manufacturers and resellers.
We would, at minimum, suggest the following:
It was inevitable that someone would choose to use a drone maliciously. In the Gatwick case, the exact motive of the perpetrator remains unknown, although the police are ruling out terrorism. Whatever the motive, this case makes it abundantly clear that more needs to be done to regulate drone usage and identify drones and link them to their operators. It also highlights the need for effective and swift countermeasures to bring down a rogue craft.
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]]>The post Huawei Mate 20 – Design Power appeared first on Counterpoint.
]]>The Mate 20 series encompasses the Mate 20 Lite, launched several weeks ago, and joined today by the Mate 20, Mate 20 Pro, The Porsche Design Mate 20 RS and the 7.21″ screen Mate 20 X. We expect the Mate 20 and Mate 20 Pro will be the biggest volume drivers so most remarks here will refer to those models. The Mate 20 X may get attention in some Asian markets as users seek to combine smartphone and tablet use cases.
The Mate 20 Series (Lite aside) is the first Huawei product series to incorporate the HiSilicon Kirin 980 SoC that we reviewed at its launch at the IFA show in Berlin last month see here.
The messaging around the Mate 20 series is a combination of power and design.
In terms of design, Huawei has taken a significant forward step from previous Mate Series devices. These included large displays and many attractive design features but were quite hefty. The Mate 20 series all include displays over six inches in diagonal dimensions (6.39” and 6.53” for the Pro and Mate 20 respectively). The Pro has an OLED display with higher resolution compared to the standard Mate 20’s LCD, but both displays look good. Both also feature significantly curved edges, reminiscent of Samsung flagship devices.
Huawei has developed a strong reputation for battery longevity. The Mate 20 series will enhance this still further. Huawei has Samsung firmly in its sights. The Galaxy S9 series and the Note 9 do not have great battery performances. The Note series is still trying to emerge from the shadow of the infamous Note 7 battery fire debacle. Its mishandling of that episode is, at least partly, the reason that Samsung’s market share in China languishes in the low single digits.
And while not a direct competitor, Apple also has battery issues. During the recent iPhone launch, Apple proudly proclaimed that iPhone XS and XS Max will offer an incremental 30 to 90 minutes battery autonomy respectively over the iPhone X. While the live audience cheered and whooped, the rest of the world scratched its head in bemusement at Apple’s pride in barely shifting its battery performance from one end of mediocre to the other.
In the Mate 20 Pro, Huawei has included a 4200mAH battery. With the efficiency gains from the move to the Kirin 980, this should be enough for outstanding battery performance. However, Huawei has upped the power of its SuperCharge-branded fast charger to 40W meaning 70% of the battery can be replenished in 30 minutes. In addition, and for the first time on one of its mainstream products, Huawei is supporting wireless charging using the Qi standard. However, again, Huawei wasn’t content with the trickle nature of wireless charging, so it’s gone for a fast charging version. And to add insult to injury, the Mate 20 can be used as a wireless charging pad to recharge other Qi standard devices that find themselves short of charge. The wireless charging dock will be sold as an accessory. To emphasise the safety of the batteries, Huawei has worked with the German product assurance agency TUV to certify the safety credentials of the product’s batteries.
The Mate 20 series is getting a triple rear camera set-up similar to that on the P20 Pro. In the Mate 20 series, the three cameras are arranged in a square module with the dual-tone flash making up the fourth corner of the square. The cameras are set in the center of the back rather than offset as in the P20 Pro. But gone is the mono-sensor; Huawei substituting it for a super-wide-angle lens. This offers both very wide-angle shots and improves the camera’s ability to achieve macro-level close focus.
We have been impressed with the B&W imagery shot with the P20 Pro. When asked, Huawei claims that it can still generate the powerful black and white images through software, thanks to work done with Leica.
Biometric security features on the Mate 20 Pro have been significantly enhanced. The device gets a 3D depth-sensing module for face recognition. This is similar to that found on the latest iPhones. And the fingerprint sensor has moved under the display. In addition, the Mate 20 will have a password vault. The standard Mate 20 retains the fingerprint sensor on the back and doesn’t have the 3D facial recognition. Instead, the notch is reduced to what Huawei calls a teardrop; barely larger than the front-facing camera.
Huawei has done quite a lot of work around the enterprise usability of the Mate series including the ability to screencast wirelessly. In this mode, the screen of the phone acts as a touchpad. However Bluetooth accessories such as keyboard and mouse can be added. In our brief try out, it worked quite well but had a few glitches.
The software environment has been significantly improved. EMUI, which has been steadily improving over the last few years, has been cleaned-up considerably with a massive reduction in the number of selectable and often confusing options. In addition, Huawei has been working on the computer vision aspects enabled by the, now dual, neural processing units. The device has been trained to recognise over 120 million items, which are linked through more than 200 e-commerce platforms. The goal is to enable the user to use the phone to recognise and buy various items. We remain to be convinced, as we were when Samsung introduced the idea with the Galaxy S9.
In terms of pricing, Huawei is taking full advantage of the headroom that Apple is creating. The Mate 20 starts at €799 for the 4GB+128GB model, €849 for the 6+128GB. The Mate 20 Pro is €1049 for 6+128GB. The Mate 20 X looks like a bargain at €899. For the record, the Porsche Design Mate 20RS manages to make even iPhones look cheap as they tip over the 2000 euro mark for the 512GB version.
The Huawei P20 Pro was the first Huawei model that felt like you were making no compromises in using it. It was justifiably widely praised by testers. Samsung should have been worried at that point. Apple needn’t have been overly concerned – it has always been unlikely a hardened iOS user will give a Huawei phone a second glance, despite Huawei besting iPhones on almost all performance benchmarks. We think the Mate 20 builds on what Huawei accomplished with the P20 series. Apple still needn’t be concerned, but Samsung should be in full panic mode.
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