iPhone Has Disappointing China Debut
By wchung | 23 Jun, 2026
Apple Inc.‘s local partner has sold 5,000 iPhones since the smart phone’s formal weekend debut in China, a lackluster start after analysts warned the company might be setting prices too high.
China Unicom Ltd. chairman Lu Yimin told shareholders Tuesday in Hong Kong that iPhone sales had “passed 5,000” as of that day, said Zhang Xinnian, director of investor relations for the company’s Hong Kong arm.
Unicom’s first iPhones lack Wi-Fi due to Chinese regulatory restrictions and are priced at about 20 percent above unlocked models brought in from abroad and sold in Chinese street markets. Some customers said they paid the higher price to get Unicom support and to avoid the risk of getting counterfeit models.
In the United States, Apple says it sold 4 million iPhones in the first 200 days of sale in 2007, or an average of 20,000 per day.
Unicom hopes the sleek smart phone will give it an edge against giant rival China Mobile Ltd., the world’s biggest phone company by subscribers. Chinese news reports say Unicom hopes to sell 5 million in three years, but the company declined to confirm that.
Unicom’s prices range from 4,999 yuan ($730) to 6,999 yuan ($1,025) for the high-end, 32-gigabyte iPhone 3GS. That is 20 percent above the 5,700 yuan ($835) charged by merchants at Chinese street markets for a 3GS with Wi-Fi.
China has an estimated 1.5 million to 2 million such phones using China Mobile 3G service that allows Internet access and other features.
11/4/2009 5:22 AM BEIJING (AP)
Recent Articles
- How the Philippines Went from an Asian Economic Leader to Laggard
- Pakistan May See Economic Dividend from Its Role As Peacekeeper
- KOSPI Plunges Nearly 10% After Regulator Warns on Leveraged ETFs
- Asian Refiners See Little Room for Iranian Oil, Leaving China as Key Buyer After US Waiver
- China Beats US with World's Fastest Non-AI Supercomputer
- Mamdani's Socialist Pull to Be Tested in Tuesday's Primaries
- Chinese Self-Driver Momenta to Launch Hong Kong IPO Next Week
- SpaceX Lost Over $600 Billion in Past 3 Sessions As Nasdaq 100 Sheds over $1 Trillion
- Over 5,000 People Trapped in Myanmar Scam Centers Near Thai Border
- EV Demand Powered Europe Car Market in May, Helping Chinese Brands Grow Share
