Posts Tagged ‘Apple’

Will new iPad keep Apple from dropping?

March 9th, 2012

Apple Inc. on Wednesday unveiled the much-anticipated third-generation iPad. In a so-called “post-PC world” when the tablet computer market is divided as iPad and non-iPad, many are wondering whether the new device can defend Apple’s dominance and keep one of the world’s most valuable companies from slowing down.

When unveiling the new iPad, Apple’s Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook noted the industry is in a post-PC revolution and Apple has “feet firmly planted in the post-PC future.”

Cook said that Apple is fortunate to have three post-PC products, namely iPod, iPhone and the iPad, which make up 76 percent of Apple’s revenues last year. Called the “poster child of the post-PC world”, a total of 15.4 million units of iPad were sold during the fourth quarter of 2011, which overtops personal computer units from any major manufacturers such as HP, Lenovo, Dell and Acer.

Sarah Rotman Epps, an analyst of market research firm Forrester Research, told Xinhua in a phone interview that she thinks the new iPad is a “truly impressive feat of engineering”, noting the new tablet will raise the bars for Apple’s counterparts to compete both in the hardware and software side.

Running on a faster A5X chip and 4G network, the new iPad also got app updates, such as iPhoto, to deliver the performance of sharper Retina Display, which has 1 million more pixels than a large-screen HDTV.

Along with HD video recording, dictation input and other new features, the new iPad will “enhance the consumer experience in a significant way,” Epps said.

To fight rivals like Amazon which use lower-prices tablets to encroach on iPad’s share, Apple chooses to keep the iPad2 in its product line with a 100-U.S.-dollar price reduction. The 16GB and WiFi-only iPad 2 is now 399 dollars.

Statistics and forecasts are quite bright for Apple and the new iPad. Forrester Research said 65 percent of all touchscreen tablets in use at work in the United States are iPads. According to IMS Research, another research firm, Apple dominated the global tablet market with a 62 percent market share last year and the number is forecast to increase to 70 percent in 2012.

“There is a large customer base loyal to Apple products that have been waiting for the latest tablet. Many owners of the iPad 1 are also expected to upgrade to the latest release. In addition to this consumer demand, growth is also forecast as a result of sales into enterprise and education,” said IMS Research.

Meanwhile, some competitors have come to a sobering evaluation of their performances in the market, admitting that their attempt to grab the tablet share has largely been a flop.

“Honestly, we’re not doing very well in the tablet market,” Hankil Yoon, a product strategy executive for Samsung, said last Monday during a media roundtable at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain.

However, not all industry watchers are quite impressed by the new generation iPad. Rob Enderle, a veteran analyst in Silicon Valley, said Apple vowed to achieve things Steve Jobs hadn’t finished, but it didn’t. The new iPad “is over-promising,” he told Xinhua in a phone interview.

He said the problem for the new iPad is it cannot embrace all new product benchmarks by increasing the depth of the line and significantly improving the hardware. He noted that some of the new device’s improved performance depends on the 4G network which is not quite popular and mature for the moment in the United States.

Last month, James B. Stewart of The New York Times said in an article that it’s just a matter of time before Apple’s growth confronts the law of large numbers which suggests that high earnings growth and a rapid rise in share price will slow down as the companies grow larger.

Some companies have been felled by the law. Cisco Systems hit a market capitalization of 557 billion dollars at the peak of technology bubble in March 2000, but its capitalization is currently around 100 billion dollars, down by 80 percent since then.

As many analysts and reporters said Apple’s innovation has been incremental, Epps, the analyst, pointed out that the new iPad is “a gut renovation masquerades as incremental innovation,” and the formula for Apple’s success is the company designs its products for its customers.

She said customers will wait in line at an Apple Store to buy the new iPad that is designed for customers, not the press.

“We expect that the new iPad will sell even more units than the previous version has,” she told Xinhua.

Source:http://english.cri.cn/6826/2012/03/08/191s685660.htm

Apple Business Unit Director Bob Wambaugh Joins Milestone Technologies, Inc.

March 9th, 2012

The anticipated release of the new iPad and growth of Apple in business only confirms that Silicon Valley-based IT solutions provider Milestone Technologies, Inc. (MILESTONE) is positioned to enable clients to succeed. Securely integrating iOS and Mac devices into company IT environments since 2010, MILESTONE’s next move was bringing on Apple’s Director of Worldwide Enterprise Customer Care, Bob Wambaugh, to run MILESTONE’s Apple Business Unit (Apple Practice).

“As MILESTONE’s business continues to grow we see tremendous demand for increasing our ability to provide iPads for business and integration of Apple technologies (both iOS and Mac) into companies’ production IT environment where it can be managed securely with the right level of ongoing support. Bob’s expertise and leadership at Apple with enterprise business customers adds significant experience and industry leadership to our team at MILESTONE,” says Jim Glueck, COO MILESTONE.

Wambaugh’s initial focus at MILESTONE is account planning and taking part in speaking engagements and demonstrations of Apple technologies for the enterprise Fortune 500 companies, covering MILESTONE’s service offerings, which include iOS and Mac integration, deployment, service, support and training. Part of his decision to join the company was that he considers MILESTONE an excellent opportunity to provide business services and support to companies implementing Apple products into their businesses. Dr. Wambaugh will report directly to Jim Glueck, MILESTONE’s Chief Operating Officer.

Originally joining Apple in 1990 as a Field Technical Trainer, Wambaugh held various positions from technical sales to technical support. One of his most memorable positions was as Director of Apple’s Worldwide Developer Relations department where he enjoyed working with developers to create cool applications for the Mac. He jokes that he was in AppleCare before there was AppleCare.

Dr. Wambaugh’s experience also included working in Sun Microsystems’ Consumer Appliance Division where he led a team of developers creating VMs and Java based software for the consumer market.

Dr. Wambaugh brings forward a diverse educational background with a Ph.D. in Instructional Systems, a Masters in Adult and Community Education and an undergraduate degree in Geo Science. He started his career as a middle school science teacher eventually landing at The Pennsylvania State University where he was Director of the Regional Computer Resource Center. “This was one of my fondest memories and I consider it a big accomplishment helping teachers and schools bring technology into their classrooms. I felt I was making a difference,” Wambaugh said.

Source:http://www.technology-digital.com/press_releases/hardware/apple-business-unit-director-bob-wambaugh-joins-milestone-technologies-inc

Apple brings movies to iCloud, upgrades Apple TV

March 8th, 2012

Apple is making it easier for people who buy movies through iTunes to play them on the various devices they own.

Apple said Wednesday that customers can now save some movies on its iCloud remote storage service. That system lets devices such as the iPad and the iPhone retrieve content wirelessly. Before, if you bought a movie on one device to play on another, you needed to connect both to a personal computer with a physical cord. iCloud does away with that.

The change also means people will be able to watch purchased movies on an improved Apple TV set-top box going on sale next week.

That development should allay frustration consumers have had with digital purchases of movies, which could be bought on iPads and iPhones, but couldn’t be stored on the Apple TV device because it has no hard drive. Apple TV owners had been limited to renting movies until now.

“iCloud now supports movies, starting today,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said at a packed presentation in San Francisco.

Previously, Apple’s iCloud saved only users’ songs, photos and documents on its computer servers.

Apple’s head of Internet services, Eddy Cue, demonstrated how the movie system would work using a new Apple TV set-top box. The device will now be able to play movies in the “1080p” format, the highest-resolution video standard in common use. Previously, Apple TV could only play back movies in “720p.”

The small box, which comes with a remote, will still cost $99. The upgraded version will go on sale next week. The box will continue to offer online movie streaming services that require monthly subscriptions such as Netflix. On Wednesday, Netflix Inc said customers will be able to sign up for its service directly from an Apple TV box and pay for it through an iTunes account.

Movies from Sony Corp and the Walt Disney Co will work on iCloud.

But those from Comcast Corp’s Universal Pictures and News Corp’s 20th Century Fox won’t initially be available because of existing deals with Time Warner Inc’s premium pay TV channel, HBO.

HBO’s policy is to prevent studios from selling movies on iTunes when the movies are playing on its service, which usually begins within a year of their theatrical release. Consumers who buy movies before they start playing on HBO will be allowed to access them through iCloud.

HBO made an exception for sister company Warner Bros. to participate in iCloud in this way, and it will likely do the same for Universal and Fox, said HBO spokesman Jeff Cusson.

“Like with any other technological enhancement, we’ve always been able to find common ground with our studio partners and I’m sure we’ll have the same result here,” Cusson said.

The announcement comes about a week before five Hollywood studios including Sony, Warner Bros. and Fox are to announce that Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will become a partner for an alternative standard of saving movie purchases online called UltraViolet.

Studios are trying boost digital purchases of movies as DVD sales continue to slip. Hollywood believes that digital sales will only increase rapidly if it gives consumers a way to access their purchases on multiple devices easily. For now, Apple’s iCloud and the studios’ UltraViolet will not be compatible with each other.

The movie announcement came at an Apple event where Cook also revealed a new iPad that has higher screen resolution than the previous model and can work on faster 4G cellular networks.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/news/hardware/Apple-brings-movies-to-iCloud-upgrades-Apple-TV/articleshow/12183483.cms

As new Apple iPad debut nears, some see decline of PCs

March 6th, 2012

The chief executive of Apple, Timothy D. Cook, has a prediction: The day will come when tablet devices like the Apple iPad outsell traditional personal computers.

His forecast has backing from a growing number of analysts and veteran technology industry executives, who contend that the torrid growth rates of the iPad, combined with tablet competition from the likes of Amazon.com and Microsoft, make a changing of the guard a question of when, not if.

Tablet sales are likely to get another jolt this week when Apple introduces its newest version of the iPad, which is expected to have a higher resolution screen. With past iterations of the iPad and iPhone, Apple has made an art of refining the devices with better screens, faster processors and speedier network connections, as well as other bells and whistles – steadily broadening their audiences.

An Apple spokeswoman, Trudy Muller, declined to comment on an event the company is holding Wednesday in San Francisco that is expected to feature the new product.

Any surpassing of personal computers by tablets will be a case of the computer industry’s tail wagging the dog. The iPad, which seemed like a nice side business for Apple when it was introduced in 2010, has become a franchise for the company, accounting for $9.15 billion in revenue in the holiday quarter, or about 20 percent of Apple’s total revenue. The roughly 15 million iPads Apple sold in that period was more than twice the number it sold a year earlier.

In the fall, Amazon introduced the iPad’s first credible competitor in the $199 Kindle Fire. Although Amazon does not release sales figures for the device, some analysts estimate it sold about 4 million in the holiday quarter. Later this year, tablets from a variety of hardware manufacturers based on a new, touchscreen-friendly operating system from Microsoft, Windows 8, could further propel the market.

“Tablets are on fire, there’s no question about that,” said Brad Silverberg, a venture capitalist in Seattle at Ignition Partners and a former Microsoft executive, who hastened to add that he was speaking mainly of the iPad, which dominates current sales.

Tablets are not there yet. In 2011, PCs outsold tablets almost 6 to 1, estimates Canalys, a technology research company. But that is still a significant change from 2010, the iPad’s first year on the market, when PCs outsold tablets 20 to1, according to Canalys. For the last two years, PC sales were flat, while iPad sales were booming. The Kindle Fire and Barnes & Noble’s Nook gave the market an additional lift over the holidays. Apple is banking on the tablet market. Its iPad brought in nearly 40 percent more revenue during the holidays than Apple’s own computer business, the Macintosh, did.

“From the first day it shipped, we thought – not just me, many of us thought at Apple – that the tablet market would become larger than the PC market, and it was just a matter of the time that it took for that to occur,” Cook of Apple said recently at a Goldman Sachs investor conference.

Gene Munster, an analyst at Piper Jaffray, estimated that Cook’s prediction would come true in 2017, but others contend tablets will be on top sooner than that.

For example, in a blog post on Friday, Horace Dediu, an analyst with Asymco in Finland, made a detailed argument that tablet sales would pass traditional PC sales in the fall of 2013. His projections rest heavily on an assumption that Apple will face more serious competition in the tablet market from Amazon’s Kindle Fire, Windows 8 and a wave of other devices based on Google’s Android, an operating system that has been mostly successful in the smartphone market.

Tim Bucher, an entrepreneur who has held senior positions at Apple, Microsoft and Dell, said tablet sales would “absolutely” pass those of PCs, a trend he argued will become even more pronounced as a younger, tablet-savvy generation ages.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/hardware/as-new-apple-ipad-debut-nears-some-see-decline-of-pcs/articleshow/12157249.cms

iPhone-maker Apple’s valuation tops $500bn

March 1st, 2012

Apple Inc’s market capitalization topped $500 billion for the first time, cementing its lead as the world’s most valuable business and reaching heights not seen by any company since the last recession.

The shares gained 1.3 per cent to $542.44 today, bringing its market value to $505.8 billion. Apple has risen 34 per cent in 2012, following gains in each of the past three years. The company is worth $98.1 billion more than the world’s second- most-valuable business, Exxon Mobil Corp.

Apple investors are anticipating a sales boost from the company’s latest iPad tablet computer, due on March 7. They’re also banking on a new iPhone coming by the third quarter and the possibility of Apple offering a dividend, its first since 1995, said Howard Ward, a money manager at Gamco Investors Inc in Rye, New York.

Demand for Apple’s products has helped the company increase profit faster than its stock price, making the price-to-earnings ratio more favorable, he said.

“Impressively, its market cap has risen to the $500 billion level as its price-to-earnings multiple has actually contracted,” said Ward, who helps oversee $36 billion in assets. “At 12 times this year’s expectation of earnings, it stands in stark contrast to the experience of Cisco Systems, which sold at over 100 times earnings when it approached the $500 billion level in 2000.”

Cisco’s ascent
After trading near the half-trillion-dollar mark during the dot-com era, Cisco Systems Inc has tumbled to a market value of $107.1 billion. The last US company valued at $500 billion was Exxon in April 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The Irving, Texas-based energy producer now trades for $407.7 billion.

Under Steve Jobs, Apple transformed itself from an also-ran in the personal-computer market to a leader in consumer electronics, music sales and mobile devices. The Cupertino, California-based company has maintained its growth since Jobs’s death in October, reassuring investors that Apple can continue updating products and pioneering new markets.

“What Apple has done is it gives you an indication of where the markets are going,” said Mark Bronzo, who helps manage about $24 billion at Security Global Investors in Irvington, New York. “Their products tend to lead, and everyone tends to follow.”

Apple posted net income last quarter of $13.1 billion, one of the highest quarterly profits on record, putting it in the same league as energy companies such as Exxon and Moscow-based OAO Gazprom, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Per-share profit of $13.87 for the period was more than Apple earned in any full year before 2010. Sales rose 73 per cent to $46.3 billion.

Sales leader
The results also marked the first time revenue topped Hewlett-Packard Co’s, underscoring how Apple’s focus on sleek, touch-screen mobile devices has rearranged the technology industry’s pecking order. Net income, meanwhile, exceeded total revenue at Google Inc., Apple’s largest rival in mobile operating systems.

New Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook is pushing deeper into China and adding carriers for the iPhone. Only 30 per cent of the world’s wireless-service providers now carry the device, giving Apple room to grow, said Katy Huberty, an analyst at Morgan Stanley in New York.

The risk is that carriers may refuse to continue paying big subsidies to sell the iPhone, making it less attractive to consumers, said Ed Zabitsky, an analyst at Toronto-based ACI Research.

Going Apple’s way
“A lot has gone in Apple’s favor the last few years,” said Zabitsky, the lone analyst with a sell rating on the stock. “There was great execution on their side, and poor execution by its competitors.”

Apple plans to hold an event on March 7 in San Francisco, where it’s expected to unveil the latest iPad. The new device will sport a high-definition display, run a faster processor and work with speedier wireless networks, people familiar with the product said in January.

The company is counting on the new iPad to beat back competition from newer devices running Google’s Android software. Apple has sold more than 55 million iPads, generating at least $34.5 billion in revenue.

The company also may use the March event to unveil an updated Apple TV set-top box, which could stream higher- resolution video to consumers’ televisions, according to Gene Munster, an analyst at Piper Jaffray Cos. in Minneapolis. Apple is planning to release a full television set as early as the December quarter, Munster said in a report, reiterating an earlier prediction.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/news/hardware/iPhone-maker-Apples-valuation-tops-500bn/articleshow/12093813.cms

Apple to launch iPad 3 on March 7

March 1st, 2012

Apple Inc, the world’s most valuable company, will hold a product event on March 7 in San Francisco, where it’s said to be releasing the third generation of its best-selling iPad tablet computer.

“We have something you really have to see. And touch,” Apple said today in an invitation, which features a picture of an iPad screen. The new device will sport a high-definition display, run a faster processor and work with speedier wireless networks, people familiar with the product said last month.

After pioneering the tablet market two years ago, Apple is counting on the new model to beat back competition from newer devices running Google Inc’s Android software. The company has sold more than 55 million iPads, generating at least $34.5 billion in revenue. Amazon.com Inc’s Kindle Fire, which uses Android, emerged as the iPad’s biggest rival over the holiday shopping season last year.

Trudy Muller, a spokeswoman for Cupertino, California-based Apple, declined to comment beyond the information in the event invitation.

Apple’s manufacturing partners in Asia started ramping up production of the iPad 3 in January, said one of the people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named because the details aren’t public. The tablet will use a quad-core chip, an enhancement that lets users jump more quickly between applications, the people said.

LTE networks
The company has been working to make the iPad compatible with a wireless standard called long-term evolution, or LTE, one of the people said last month. Carriers such as Verizon Wireless and AT&T Inc are rolling out LTE networks to give users faster access to data.

Smartphone makers, including Samsung Electronics Co, Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc and Nokia Oyj, have already introduced smartphones that work on the faster networks. Apple is bringing LTE to the iPad before the iPhone because the tablet has a bigger battery and can better support the power requirements of the newer technology, one of the people said.

The new Retina display is capable of greater resolution than the current iPad, with more pixels on its screen than some high-definition televisions, the person said. The pixels are small enough to make the images look like printed material, according to the person. Videos begin playing almost instantly because of the additional graphics processing, the person said.

New high
Apple shares were trading at $532.98 at 2:47 pm New York time, up 1.4 per cent, after earlier reaching a record high. The stock has climbed 31 per cent this year.

The introduction of the new iPad will be Apple’s first major hardware release since the death of co-founder Steve Jobs in October. With new features, Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook aims to give customers more reasons to stick with the iPad, even as rivals undercut it on price. While Apple’s tablet starts at $499, the Kindle Fire costs $199.

Amazon.com, the world’s largest online retailer, surpassed Samsung as the No 2 seller of tablet computers last quarter, shipping 3.89 million units, according to research firm IHS Inc Apple, meanwhile, maintained its lead in the market, accounting for more than half of shipments.

The company also may use the March event to unveil an updated Apple TV set-top box, which could stream higher- resolution video to consumers’ televisions, according to Gene Munster, an analyst at Piper Jaffray Cos in Minneapolis. Apple is planning to release a full television set as early as the December quarter, Munster said today in a report, reiterating an earlier prediction.

The new iPad is being assembled by Apple’s main manufacturing partner, Foxconn Technology Group. That company, which also builds the iPhone and other Apple products, gets about 22 per cent of its sales from Apple, according to supply- chain data compiled by Bloomberg.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/news/hardware/Apple-to-launch-iPad-3-on-March-7/articleshow/12079728.cms

Apple’s China nemesis Yang Long-san of Proview still dreams of market dominance

February 28th, 2012

Yang Long-san, Apple’s nemesis in a battle over the iPad trademark in China, once strutted the expo halls with dreams of market dominance. His company, Proview, may now be in ruins and his most valuable asset a disputed trademark, but those dreams remain intact.

“My biggest wish is to resolve all these frustrating problems and put them behind me,” Yang said in a recent telephone interview. “If we can resolve all the problems we have now and I have a chance to make a comeback, I’d still want to overtake my old competitors.”

Much of that will depend on whether he wins a long-running dispute over ownership of the trademark in China – Apple’s second-biggest market by revenue. Although a recent decision by the Shanghai district court to reject Proview’s demands that Apple stop selling the iPad was a setback for Proview, the case is still to be heard in the higher court in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong on Wednesday.

A decision against Apple there would set a precedent that would create an uphill battle in other cases in lower courts around China. Local media have said Proview is seeking up to 10 billion yuan ($1.6 billion) in compensation.

Proview’s fortunes may currently be the polar opposite of Apple – one has creditors at the door and the other is the world’s most valuable listed company – but both illustrate how the fickle world of technology can make or break a company.

Yang and Proview rode the first wave, when every home and office desk had to have a computer, and a screen. For Apple, the last decade has seen it ride the crest of a new wave where the computer moved from a commoditized, clunky desktop to a fashionable mobile consumer device.

Proview may now be a shadow of a company, trying to convert its last major asset into cash, but it was not always so. “They definitely existed,” says IHS analyst Rhoda Alexander, who covered them for a while. “They were a significant manufacturer and a major player.”

STRONG BRAND

Yang and the late Apple CEO Steve Jobs were born just a year apart – Jobs in 1955, Yang a year later. An engineer by training, Yang worked in the electronics industry before founding Proview in 1989 in Taipei. At that time, a Jobs-less Apple was struggling for direction: that year it released the bulky, overpriced Macintosh Portable to underwhelming reviews.

Yang, meanwhile, was building a strong brand in the cut-throat computer display business: within a decade of its founding, Proview had nearly 4 percent of the older style CRT monitor market and 12 percent of the newer, flat screen LCD market. This was the era of the desktop computer: in 1990, according to eTForecasts data, fewer than 22 million desktops were sold. By 2000, there were 98 million.

But Yang’s plans were bigger. While Proview had become a respected, albeit second- or third-tier brand for computer monitors, he wanted more. Said one analyst who met him at a computer conference in the mid 1990s: “He was very suave, very bright, very international. He had an angle … he knew everything about the world.”

In 1997, Proview International Holdings Ltd, the parent of units including Proview in Shenzhen and Taipei, became the first Taiwanese technology firm to list in Hong Kong; in 1999, it announced a deal with National Semiconductor to build an Internet-access device it called the iPAD (Internet Personal Access Device).

It was really a stripped-down PC, with a bulky CRT (cathode ray tube) monitor, a slow-ish chip and running a very basic version of Microsoft Windows. Yang told Reuters in a recent interview that Proview had dedicated significant resources to develop its iPAD, whose design could later be found in now-defunct Compaq’s iPAQ Internet Device.

Yang was also busy building market share in monitors. In April 2000, Proview cut a deal with two smaller monitor makers, MAG and CTX, to share resources. In 2003, Proview also announced a deal to build a range of display-oriented gadgets under the Motorola brand and, four years later, it teamed up with Taiwan electronics giant Tatung, which took a 16 percent stake in Hong Kong-listed Proview.

By then, the global financial crisis had hit.

SEEKING SALVATION

In June 2008, Proview reported its first loss and was grappling for salvation. The Tatung deal, it said, “will significantly enhance the Group’s performance in the coming years.” The next year, there was no mention of the Tatung tie-up.

In September 2009, its Brazilian subsidiary had filed for bankruptcy protection and Proview International was running into serious problems. Yang had in early 2008 transferred his around 30 percent stake to his son, and by late 2009 was lending his own money to the company.

When a company sought to buy the group’s IPAD trademarks, lawyers sold them on Dec. 23 for 35,000 pounds ($55,500).

Two weeks later, Proview stock, which had been languishing at around HK$0.25, doubled in a few days on heavy volume. The company was forced by the Hong Kong Stock Exchange to say it was unaware of any reasons for the sudden interest.

On Jan. 27, Apple announced the iPad. A week later, with Proview shares still trading heavily, the company conceded the truth of a report by Beijing Daily that China rights to the IPAD trademark were owned by its Shenzhen subsidiary. It was now clear Proview had sold trademarks to Apple – but not all of them.

With strong interest in the iPad ahead of its April launch, Proview was now sitting on something infinitely more valuable than any of its assets.

Now Yang was being pulled in all directions. Much of Proview’s debts were short-term, he said later, and the company had been defaulting on payments as early as December 2008. The Shenzhen subsidiary – the group’s largest operation – was hardest hit, leading to the local government corralling the banks it owed money to to support the company.

“Proview had a glorious past in Shenzhen and they wanted to see us survive the crisis,” said Yang. “But frankly, once the debt pile increased and suppliers got into trouble, the whole thing ballooned and that led to the factories closing down.”

By early 2010, the banks, too, were after whatever they could recover.

And creditors were not only going after his group’s assets in Shenzhen; a bankruptcy petition was filed against him personally in Hong Kong on March 4. Yang said creditors were only lending money to the company if he personally guaranteed the loans. “We needed them to continue to support Proview,” he said.

In March 2010, Proview warned of a “significant loss” for the six months to end-December 2009, which would be the last financial results announced. It then hired financial advisers to deal with creditors and come up with a restructuring plan, but the fate of the trademarks seemed to be the company’s focus.

Apple lawyers were firing off letters demanding Proview hand over the rest of the patents. By April, Proview was fending off reports that it was planning to auction the patents, dismissing one press article as “not accurate at all”.

ASSURANCES In fact, it wasn’t as clear-cut as that. The only assurances it had given Apple were that it wouldn’t sell them before April 30, a date it then pushed back to May 30, according to Hong Kong court documents. These also showed Proview Shenzhen was quietly trying to transfer the trademarks to a subsidiary, Yoke Technology.

But time was running out. Legal proceedings by Chinese creditors to recover assets prompted the Hong Kong Stock Exchange to suspend trading in Proview shares on May 12.

Two days later, a Chinese court ordered Proview to sell off assets of another Chinese subsidiary, Ningbo Prowell. On May 20, Apple began legal action against Proview in Shenzhen.

The battle to save Proview International was lost. By mid 2010, Yang had been forced to publicly concede that the bankruptcy proceedings against him were related to him loaning money to Proview; on Aug. 2, he lost the case and resigned from the board of Proview, whose shares were suspended.

The company was effectively moribund: some HK$3.83 billion ($494 million) was overdue, while loans guaranteed by Yang himself amounted to HK$1.15 billion, according to company filings.

At its peak, Proview had employed 18,000 people and had offices across the world. Now, only a few hundred staff remained, mostly at the company’s Wuhan plant. Its Hong Kong headquarters is empty and its phone numbers no longer work. Only the factory in Wuhan continues to function. The plant in Shenzhen is a ghost town.

All activity centres on the trademark case. Yang is quick to blame the financial crisis for his company’s downfall; many of his clients in the United States went bust, he said, or were in dire financial straits. He points to Circuit City, which filed for bankruptcy in November 2008. But analysts note many other companies rode the crisis.

Yang remains optimistic he can both win the case against Apple and rebuild his empire. But there are plenty of obstacles.

First, there’s his role: although still, through his son, the controlling shareholder of the group, Yang is a bankrupt in Hong Kong. A Hong Kong court has been critical of his role in the trademark dispute, saying he was an active participant in what the judge called a “conspiracy”.

Yang says that position as chairman of Proview Shenzhen is simply because “creditors in China didn’t want to deal with another person who is not familiar with the company.”

Beyond that, the relationship with Tatung, still a significant shareholder, seems to be on ice. Both Tatung directors resigned in 2011. Yang has engineered the removal of his successor, Elina Hui, as chairman because, he says, “she did many things against the company’s principles.”

Proview has filed a lawsuit against her. It was not possible to reach Hui for comment. The company, which has yet to file annual reports for 2010 and 2011, faces de-listing in June if it cannot submit viable proposals for resuming business.

Yang is undeterred, and convinced he can still take on his competitors. But he does acknowledge he would do it differently now. “Now that I think of it,” he says, “it was a mistake to just blindly focus on expanding. I should have gone after profitability instead.”

“I hope we can return to our glory days. I’m sure our shareholders are hoping for the same.”

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/hardware/ipad-row-apples-china-nemesis-yang-long-san-of-proview-still-dreams-of-market-dominance/articleshow/12052745.cms?curpg=1

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