Hon Hai Precision Industry’s profit plunged by the most on record after the coronavirus disrupted its China production and walloped global smartphone demand.
Apple’s most important manufacturing partner recorded an 89% decline in net income to NT$2.1-billion (US$70-million) in the first three months of 2020. Revenue slid almost 12% to NT$929.7-billion, according to Bloomberg News’s calculations based on previously reported monthly sales numbers.
The earnings decline drove home to extent to which Covid-19 and the resultant global lockdown has chilled electronics demand and driven up costs for upstream producers like Hon Hai that had to adapt to supply-chain disruption. Global shipments of smartphones fell at their fastest rate on record in the first quarter, hitting the assembler’s sales even though its main production facilities managed to return to full seasonal staffing levels around mid-March.
On Friday, Hon Hai, known also as Foxconn, said it incurred costs related to the pandemic of NT$10-billion, though some of that will be compensated by the Chinese government. It added it had put the worst of the slump behind it and revenue should recover to double-digit sequential growth this quarter. But the company, which gets half its sales making iPhones and devices for Apple, warned smartphone demand remained uncertain.
Production at many of Apple’s Asian partners ground to a halt after efforts to curb the spread of Covid-19 kicked in. That resulted in severe shipping delays for devices and led to component supply bottlenecks. Consumers also sheltered at home, hammering retail sales. At one point, Apple closed all 42 retail outlets in China, a critical market for the company, followed by store closures in other countries. While shops in China have reopened, most of its international ones have not.
Delayed
Covid-19 has also delayed product development and launches. Apple’s four upcoming redesigned iPhones with 5G will come out several weeks later than usual — but still within the northern hemisphere autumn window. In May, Apple failed to provide a forecast for the first time in more than a decade.
Foxconn has already slashed its 2020 revenue projections in the wake of the pandemic. It told investors in April that it still has time to help Apple launch new iPhones in time for the holidays, but cautioned the schedule could be disrupted if the pandemic persists. — Reported by Debby Wu, (c) 2020 Bloomberg LP