HTC removed from Taiwan’s top 50 index after share price drops

TechSpot
Date: September 9, 2015
By: Rob Thubron

Smartphone maker HTC is to be removed from the Taiwan Stock Exchange’s TWSE Taiwan 50 2015-09-09-image-6index following the company’s dwindling market share and plummeting stock price.

In June, HTC said that its second-quarter revenues had halved from the same period last year, resulting in an operating loss of $155 million. This was followed by an announcement in August that it would lay off 15 percent of its workforce and cut operating costs by 35 percent, as it reported its lowest monthly revenue in almost a decade.

Founded in 1997 and once one the biggest names in the smartphone market, HTC has struggled financially in recent years. The company’s global smartphone market share has dropped from 10.7 percent in 2011 to around 2 percent today. And while its flagship One M9 gained generally good reviews, it wasn’t a huge upgrade from its predecessor and fell short when compared to the best Samsung and Apple had to offer, leading to lower than expected sales.

Some have pointed to HTC not being able to compete with the massive advertising budgets of the market leaders as one of the reasons behind its current situation; the $60 million Samsung spent on its launch campaign for the Galaxy S6 was the equivalent of HTC’s entire annual marketing budget. There’s also been the issue of Chinese manufacturers such as Xiaomi and Lenovo putting pressure on HTC’s lower-range smartphones.     [FULL  STORY]

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