VR-minded HTC to sell its smartphone plant in Shanghai
Taiwan-based smartphone company HTC Corp announced that it will sell its land and plant in Shanghai for 630 million yuan ($91 million; 84 million euros; 73 million), in a strategic move to fund expansion of its fledgling virtual reality business.
The 114,831-square-meter smartphone factory will be sold to Shanghai Xingbao Information Technology Co - with the net gain of the disposal estimated at about 147.76 million yuan, HTC said.
The decision was made this month by the company's board, with the aim of restructuring its operations and assets.
A visitor tries a pair of HTC Vive virtual reality goggles at the 2016 Computex computer exhibition in Taiwan. Provided to China Daily |
The move was part of an asset rationalization program to improve operational efficiency. HTC added that there were no implications for its business or staff levels, and its production capacity would remain as planned.
After the sale of the Shanghai factory, HTC's smartphone production will rely mainly on its Taoyuan factories in Taiwan. The net gain is expected to be invested in its VR unit, HTC Vive.
Zhao Ziming, an analyst at Beijing-based consultancy Analysys, says the move showed HTC's resolve to gear up its expansion in the emerging VR business, in order to gain a leading position in the market.
"In recent years its smartphone business has declined rapidly, especially in the Chinese mainland market," Zhao says. "After selling the Shanghai facility, the company will be able to use more resources to develop the VR business."
Zhao says the sale would likely impact HTC's smartphone business and there could be changes to staff deployment.
HTC used to own several factories across the Chinese mainland and in Taiwan to produce its own brand of smartphones.
The Shanghai plant, which stands out as one of the key manufacturing facilities, was reportedly able to produce up to 2 million smartphones per month.
But analysts said that the current demand for HTC smartphones does not appear to support that level of installed capacity, and it was proving hard for the Taiwan phone-maker win back its past glory in the global smartphone sector.
HTC reported in January that its annual revenue declined by more than a third in 2016. Last year the company earned NT$78.16 billion ($2.55 billion), a fall of 35.77 percent, on revenue of NT$121.68 billion.
Zhao says the move also showed that HTC was pinning its hopes on its VR brand, HTC Vive.
"In recent years, HTC's priorities have transferred from the smartphone to the VR business," Zhao says.
Ma Si contributed to this story.
ouyangsijia@chinadaily.com.cn