Smartphone sector feels impact of supply disruption

Smartphone sector feels impact of supply disruption
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Highlights

The Indian smartphone industry, which relies heavily on China for components and sub-assemblies, has started feeling the impact of supply disruptions in certain products category due to the coronavirus outbreak, market watchers said on Tuesday.

New Delhi: The Indian smartphone industry, which relies heavily on China for components and sub-assemblies, has started feeling the impact of supply disruptions in certain products category due to the coronavirus outbreak, market watchers said on Tuesday.

The industry is keeping a close watch to see if shuttered factories in China reopen in the coming days and supplies resume sometime this week.

"Yes, the industry is already feeling the impact and some products and models have been impacted. It is still early to draw any conclusion as select factories are slated to resume production in a phased manner," India Cellular and Electronics Association (ICEA) Chairman Pankaj Mohindroo said.

He declined to comment on the specifics, but added, "we are in a wait-and-watch mode this entire week." Industry watchers, however, admitted that the situation on the ground is bad, as the supply lines for smartphones predominantly come from China.

At the same time, they said the market itself is slow and and demand, sluggish. An e-mail query sent to Xiaomi, Oppo, vivo, realme and POCO on the impact on supplies was unanswered.

Meanwhile, reports suggest that one of the large contract manufacturers and component suppliers has resumed operations in one of its plants in China, but is operating with only a small fraction of its workforce.

The death toll in China's novel coronavirus outbreak has gone up to 1,016 with 108 new fatalities reported mostly in the worst-affected Hubei province while the confirmed cases of infection have soared to 42,638.

Outside China, there have been more than 350 infections reported in almost 30 places with two deaths, one in the Philippines and the other in Hong Kong.

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