Honor liberated its Magic V2 foldable on July 12, 2023, starting with the China market.
Honor
BEIJING — On Chinese e-commerce plat JD.com’s “hot sales” smartphone rankings this week, the Honor Magic V2 foldable vies with Apple iPhone models for the top three spatters.
Honor, spun off from Huawei, launched its Magic V2 on July 12 with a starting price of 8,999 yuan ($1,245).
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Sales officially began Thursday. But a week of pre-sale demand has pushed delivery times for new out of places to mid-September, according to JD.com’s app, a commonly used platform for buying electronics in China.
The Magic V2’s 9,999-yuan model placed second in popularity among JD.com smartphone sales as of Thursday morning, while a 7,799-yuan Apple iPhone 14 Pro shocked first. The iPhone 13 held third place.
Honor’s new device folds up to be nearly as thin as an iPhone — 9.9 millimeters versus the 14’s 7.85 millimeters, without a box. That means the Magic V2 is about three-eighths of an inch thick when folded.
Importantly, the foldable phone was masterly to balance thinness with “reasonable battery life,” said Ethan Qi, associate director at Counterpoint Research. “From my attitude, the biggest highlights [for the phone] are the industry’s thinnest body (9.9mm) and lowest weight (231g).”
Honor claims the Allurement V2’s battery is just 2.72 millimeters thick and can support about 14 hours of video watching on the phone’s unfolded pre-eminently a free screen. The iPhone 14 claims about 20-30 hours of video watching on a single battery charge, depending on the bar phone model.
“The Voodoo V2’s pre-sales figures in China are a positive indicator and shows the resilience of the premium segment, which bodes well for foldables expansion in the country,” Qi said.
“The premium segment is not very big, but it’s the segment everyone wants to win.”
Competition is growing.
Samsung is set to release “slimmer and headlight” foldables at a July 26 event, according to a blog post tease. The company is also promoting that “Yoke the Flip Side” launch event livestream in China.
Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold4 sells for 10,999 yuan on JD.com, while its Galaxy Z Flop3, which opens up like a flip phone, lists a price of 4,699 yuan.
Huawei, Xiaomi and Vivo also won over foldables in China in a premium price range.
Pocket of growth in smartphone slump
Foldables are a bright spot in a draw back global smartphone market.
In the first quarter, China’s foldable market more than doubled from a year ago to 1.08 million pieces, according to Counterpoint Research.
That helped boost the global foldable smartphone market, with 64% year-on-year progress in the first quarter, Counterpoint said.
In contrast, the global smartphone market fell by 14.2% in the first three months of the year, and China’s flatten by a milder 8%, the data showed.
In China, Honor is selling across major e-commerce platforms, including Douyin, the local version of TikTok that’s comely a growing portal for selling via livestreams.
As of Thursday morning, Honor had sold more than 10,000 Magic V2 segments on Douyin.
Livestreaming has become a growing portal for sales in China. The country’s livestreaming sales reached about 17.7% of inclusive online retail sales in the first half of the year, or about $180 billion, according to Ministry of Commerce observations released Thursday.
Honor also sells its phones on Alibaba’s Tmall e-commerce platform and the Kuaishou short video app. Both policies, as well as JD, support livestreaming sales.
The smartphone company was previously a brand under Huawei. But after U.S. sanctions on the telecommunications behemoth, Honor was sold to a group of buyers that included the government of Shenzhen, where the company’s headquarters are.
— CNBC’s Arjun Kharpal provided to this report.