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Huawei Nears Revenue Peak Again, Signals Post-Sanctions Comeback

Huawei is set to announce its full-year financial results, revealing a near-return to its 2020 revenue peak despite years of U.S. sanctions. The Chinese tech giant is expected to report revenues of 860 billion yuan ($118 billion) for 2024—just shy of the record 891 billion yuan it achieved before U.S. restrictions slashed its consumer business and chip supplies.

Once in “survival mode,” Huawei now appears to be thriving again. The company has diversified into new sectors like smart driving technology, cloud software, and domestic chip development. These efforts have helped mitigate the impact of sanctions that once seemed poised to cripple its international business.

Smartphones and Software Recovery
Consultancy Isaiah Research estimates Huawei shipped over 45 million smartphones in 2024—up more than 25% year-on-year—despite continued constraints in chip yield rates. Its homegrown operating system, HarmonyOS, now powers over a billion devices. Meanwhile, Huawei’s own enterprise software system, “MetaERP,” has replaced U.S.-origin platforms like Oracle.

Auto Ambitions Paying Off
One of Huawei’s most successful pivots has been into smart vehicles. Its Aito brand—developed with Dongfeng-backed Seres—tripled its sales last year, driven by models like the M7 and M9 that feature Huawei’s driver assistance technologies. The company is also collaborating with other Chinese automakers like Chery, BAIC, JAC Group, and SAIC Group.

Innovation Under Pressure
Experts say sanctions pushed Huawei and its domestic partners toward greater innovation. “Huawei has shown incredible resilience in the face of this national state-led effort,” said Paul Triolo of the DGA-Albright Stonebridge Group. He noted that Huawei’s resurgence has led to broader industry collaboration and technological independence within China’s IT sector.

Looking Ahead: Global Patchwork Strategy
While HarmonyOS and its AI chips are gaining traction, Huawei still faces challenges regaining market share in the West due to limited access to Android. However, its infrastructure and data services are growing in markets like the Middle East. Huawei’s global strategy will likely be a “patchwork affair,” said Triolo, but it could dominate in alternative AI ecosystems across key emerging markets.

Beyond Survival
With ambitions to integrate AI into industrial communication systems and expand its connected software offerings, Huawei’s focus is now on long-term growth. It also hinted at renewed international smartphone pushes, such as its high-profile Mate XT foldable phone launch in Malaysia earlier this year.

Xreal Unveils New AR Glasses with Self-Designed Chip to Compete with Meta and Snap

Xreal, a company backed by Alibaba, launched its latest augmented reality (AR) glasses on Wednesday, aiming to rival competitors like Meta and Snap in the growing AR market.

The new Xreal One Series features the X1 chip, the company’s first self-designed processor. This development marks a significant enhancement in the glasses’ capabilities, eliminating the need for a companion device previously required to connect to phones, laptops, or gaming consoles. With the new chip, users can now see their content on a massive digital screen directly in front of them, without relying on external devices like the previous Beam accessory.

Chi Xu, CEO of Xreal, called the X1 chip “the biggest upgrade in Xreal history and probably the biggest upgrade for the entire consumer AR glasses sector,” adding that the three-year development process was crucial for making the product more competitive. Xu emphasized that the company needed a custom chip to unlock new features and differentiate itself from the competition.

Xreal, one of the leading companies in the AR glasses market, faces tough competition from other tech giants like Snap, which introduced new Spectacles in September, and Meta, which continues to push its Meta Ray-Ban partnership. Additionally, Qualcomm is collaborating with Google and Samsung on their own AR glasses.

Unlike Meta’s headsets, which are large and costly, Xreal is betting on glasses as the future of AR for mass-market adoption. “People have started to realize a headset doesn’t make sense, we need to go to lighter form factors to the glasses category,” said Xu. However, he acknowledged that the challenge is delivering a headset-like experience in a much smaller, more portable form factor.

The Xreal One and Xreal One Pro glasses start at $499 and $599, respectively.

Although AR technology has generated a lot of buzz in recent years, the market has yet to explode. High-cost and uncomfortable large headsets have failed to take off, and companies like Xreal and Meta are focusing on making glasses more compelling. However, the lack of content and clear use cases remains a hurdle for wider adoption. Xu stressed that developing good hardware is essential to attracting developers and creating the ecosystem necessary for AR to thrive.

Looking ahead, Xu projected that Xreal will sell 500,000 units of its previous products by 2025, nearly doubling this year’s sales.

 

Best Buy Raises Full-Year Profit Outlook After Beating Earnings and Revenue Expectations

Best Buy raised its profit forecast for the fiscal year after reporting stronger-than-expected earnings and revenue for the recent quarter. The company now anticipates full-year adjusted earnings per share (EPS) between $6.10 and $6.35, an increase from its previous range of $5.75 to $6.20. This comes as Best Buy works through an ongoing sales slump amid softer consumer demand following the pandemic-era tech boom and high inflation pressures.

For the quarter ending August 3, Best Buy exceeded Wall Street’s expectations, posting an EPS of $1.34 compared to the expected $1.16, and revenue of $9.29 billion against the anticipated $9.24 billion. Despite a year-over-year decline in net sales from $9.58 billion to $9.29 billion, the company’s net income grew to $291 million, up from $274 million last year.

While comparable sales fell by 2.3%, this marks a significant improvement from the 6.2% decline seen during the same period last year. The retailer has faced challenges with declining consumer electronics sales, which have been forecasted to drop another 2% in 2024 according to Circana.

Best Buy is positioning itself for recovery through several key initiatives. The company is focusing on boosting sales in computing, appliances, and home theater by deploying trained sales teams to these areas, and it is also launching a marketing campaign to engage consumers, including YouTube videos to highlight tech products.

The retailer is banking on new technology rollouts, such as Apple’s new iPads and AI-enabled laptops from Microsoft, to reignite interest and spur spending as the replacement cycle for pandemic-era tech products begins to take shape. Best Buy anticipates increasing stabilization in the industry as 2024 approaches, despite the ongoing challenges in the consumer electronics market.