Itâs a tale of two very different fortunes in the mobile-making market. HTC has today announced preliminary results for its Q3, recording a net loss of NT$2.97 billion (around $101 million) on total revenues of NT$47.52 billion ($1.6 billion) â" the veteran mobile maker HTCâs first ever quarterly loss. Compare that to Samsung, also just announcing earnings guidance for its Q3, and itâs the opposite story: Samsung is expecting record profits in its fiscal quarter.
Bloomberg reports that Samsungâs operating profit in the quarter beat analyst estimates, rising to circa 10.1 trillion won ($9.4 billion) fuelled by sales of cheaper handsets in emerging markets. While total revenue for Samsungâs Q3 is an estimated 59 trillion won ($53.9 billion).
So thatâs $1.6 billion vs. $53.9 billion. And -$101 million vs. $9.4 billion. Ouch.
Back in July, HTC issued guidance for its Q3 quarter, warning investors to expect a net loss so that itâs making a loss is not a surprise. However it had said it expected its Q3 revenue to be in the range of NT$50 billion ($1.7 billion) to NT$60 billion ($2 billion) â" so todayâs preliminary revenues of NT$47.52 billion ($1.6 billion) come in under that earlier guidance, suggesting things are even worse than it expected.
HTC is not at this point putting any meat on the bones of those preliminary numbers to explain that shortfall. But itâs likely to release audited results at the end of this month â" and may share more detail then.
A tale of two mobile makers
In some senses the comparison between Samsung and HTCâs relative fortunes is unfair, being as Samsungâs success is not purely down to making phones â"  the Samsung Group makes all sorts of gizmos, small and large, under various business subsidiaries: from TVs to fridges to tanks (yes, tanks â" aka armored personnel carriers).
But, regardless of that sprawling empire, mobile making is Samsungâs biggest business unit, although its chipmaking division (which also piggybacks on mobileâs momentum) is doing well too.
Samsungâs success in mobile can certainly partly be attributed to its huge size and resources, but also to a strategy of making a LOT of devices, at multiple price-points and form factors, to saturate the market with Samsung-branded plastic. And backing that up with a massive marketing budget.
That contrasts starkly with an HTC fallen on hard times, with a reduced portfolio and far more modest marketing means than Samsungâs (even if HTC is spending millions on hiring Robert Downey Jr. to rework its brand image).
With sliding profits and declining revenue for now eight straight quarters, HTC has been forced to prune back its portfolio, exiting the tablet category entirely for instance, to concentrate shrinking resources on a handful of devices, such as the HTC One (and a One Mini variant).
Meanwhile Samsung steamrollers the market with multiple versions of almost every device it makes, buoyed up by record profits. Iterate and conquer is Samsungâs mobile mantra.
How much time does HTC have?
While HTCâs Q3 loss is nowhere near the $972 million Z10-shaped hole in BlackBerryâs fiscal Q2 books, its first quarterly loss is nonetheless a stark marker in such a competitive space, as industry analyst Asymcoâs Horace Dediu notes in a post on HTCâs situation.
âThe observation I have been making is that once a company begins to generate negative operating margins from phone sales, that phone business never recovers,â he writes. âThe question then becomes one of gauging how long they have before the business is sold, dissolved or merged.â
2013 is already shaping up to be a bloodbath year for mobile makers, with BlackBerry looking to go private â" which at least opens up the possibility of the company being broken up and sold off for its constituent parts â" and Nokia announcing its intention to exit the mobile-making business by selling its devices & services unit to Microsoft. Itâs rapidly looking like HTCâs Peter Chou has the new most stressful job in mobile as the grandest old mobile daddies topple around him.
Dediuâs thesis is that there is a two- to three-year window after a phone making business starts making a loss before it is forced to make some kind of exit. Which means the clock is now ticking for HTC.
âHTC has just confirmed that they have lost profitability for the first time since going public in 2002. As the clock begins running the alarm is now set to a much tighter 2 years. The implication being that HTC will change ownership or control no later than mid 2015,â he adds.
As its business starts to burn money, HTC is running out of runway to try new things. Its experiment with the Facebook Home phone which, thanks to Home flopping, never really got off the ground canât have left it feeling good about off-piste options to make its products stand out, either.
But thatâs not to say it doesnât need to try. Quite the opposite; now may well be a time for HTC to consider nuclear options.
The WinDroid nuclear option
One such option surfaced in rumour form today, with Bloomberg reporting that Microsoft â" also struggling to make its mobile efforts translate into marketshare â" has reached out to HTC to see if the company would be interested in adding Windows Phone as a second OS to its Android handsets.
Standing out in an Android space so dominated by Samsung has proven to be a tough call for many device makers. HTCâs strategy has been to skin Android with its own Sense UI software, and focus on hardware design and components like the camera (with its Ultrapixel play). But while the HTC One has been very well reviewed, itâs still only one phone fighting many other Android phones. Itâs the strategy thatâs failing, not HTCâs phone design.
Partnering with Microsoft may be one way to unlock additional marketing resources to help HTC raise the profile of its devices. Microsoft has not been shy about doling out cash on co-marketing efforts around Windows Phone. And, according to the Bloomberg report, Redmond is also apparently considering nixing its WP license fee to make a dual-boot WinDroid more attractive to HTC.
But the problem is that despite Microsoftâs best efforts Windows Phoneâs marketshare remains minimal. Looked at from that perspective, does a struggling HTC really need to tie its fortunes to a struggling mobile OS?
While adopting Windows Phone didnât help Nokiaâs smartphone fortunes  â" quite the opposite, it arguably hastened Nokiaâs devicesâ demise â" it was exclusively adopting Windows Phone that was the massive misstep. So a dual-OS phone that runs Android as well as Windows Phone would at least provide a hedge against the apparent toxicity of offering only mobileâs third-placed platform.
But would a dual-OS smartphone set the market on fire? And have people falling over themselves to buy HTCâs phones? Probably not. It seems unlikely that a more complex smartphone experience is what the majority craves.
That said, a WinDroid would stand out from the Android crowd â" on merit of difference and Microsoft marketing cash. It would also give Windows Phone the benefit of (quasi-)access to Androidâs massive app ecosystem. (Ok, youâd be switching back to Android to run those apps but if lack of apps is preventing WP adoption consider that a âworkaroundâ).
So there are perhaps worse nuclear options HTC could consider. Ultimately, the marketâs reaction to an HTC-branded WinDroid would depend on what kind of software extras are bundled in and flagged up to sell the concept. So really, it comes back to marketing again.
That said, difference is all too often met with indifference in the mobile market. The problem that Microsoftâs and Facebookâs mobile efforts have faced (and continue to face) is that most people arenât unhappy with their devices. People donât have a problem with a âgrid of appsâ. Actually users really love apps.
Bottom line: Samsung and Apple have a lot of very satisfied customers, with zero inclination to switch. Itâs that indifference that try-hards like Nokia, BlackBerry, HTC, Microsoft are finding all but impossible to crack.
1997
April 4, 2002, TPE:2498
HTC Corp, (TAIEX: 2498) produces smartphones running the Android and Windows Phone 8 operating systems for themselves and as an OEM to other manufacturers. Since launching its own brand in late 2006, the company has introduced hundreds of HTC-branded products around the world. Its current flagship product is the Android-running HTC One. Founded in 1997 by Cher Wang, Chairwoman, and H T Cho - former CEO who is a chairman now, HTC made its name as the company behind many...
Samsung is one of the largest super-multinational companies in the world. Itâs possibly best known for its subsidiary, Samsung Electronics, the largest electronics company in the world.
April 4, 1974
NASDAQ:MSFT
Microsoft, founded in 1975 by Bill Gates and Paul Allen, is a veteran software company, best known for its Microsoft Windows operating system and the Microsoft Office suite of productivity software. Starting in 1980 Microsoft formed a partnership with IBM allowing Microsoft to sell its software package with the computers IBM manufactured. Microsoft is widely used by professionals worldwide and largely dominates the American corporate market. Additionally, the company has ventured into hardware with consumer products such as the Zune and...
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