US sanctions on Huawei are beginning to impact the Chinese firmโ€™s business in key markets as handset sales in Europe tumbled 16% year on year in the second quarter, according to a report from market research firm Canalys released on Monday.

Why it matters: While sales at home surged on patriotic support for the Shenzhen-based firm, demand among European consumers waned after products were cut off from future updates for Googleโ€™s Android operating system amid US sanctions.

  • Huaweiโ€™s domestic shipments soared 38% year on year in the second quarter, which analysts said stemmed from patriotic fervor among Chinese shoppers in response to US restrictions on the company.
  • Google has cut Huaweiโ€™s access to future updates and services for the Android operating system after the US put Huawei on a trade blacklist in May.
  • China blocks most Google services within the country, so Huawei uses a modified version of Android for the domestic market that lacks most popular Google apps such as YouTube and Gmail.
  • โ€œNo consumers in Europe would want a phone without Google services,โ€ Tiago Alves, vice president of Asia Pacific at Aptoide, a Portugal-based Android app store, told TechNode in an interview.

Details: Despite the drop, Huawei retained its position as the second-largest smartphone vendor in Europe with 8.5 million units shipped in the quarter, trailing South Koreaโ€™s Samsung with 18.3 million units.

  • Xiaomiโ€™s European shipments grew by nearly half in the period to hit 4.3 million.

โ€œSamsung has been quick to capitalize on Huaweiโ€™s US Entity List problems, working behind the scenes to position itself as a stable alternative in conversations with important retailers and operators,โ€

โ€” Ben Stanton, Canalys senior analyst

Context: Huawei unveiled an Android alternative called HarmonyOS last week, and claims that switching handsets to the new operating system would take only a few days if necessary.

  • US sanctions on Huawei show no sign of easing up as the trade conflict with China continues.
  • Huawei chairman Liang Hua said last month that the company faces major difficulties ahead and its consumer business will be most affected in the second half.

Huaweiโ€™s Hongmeng may not replace Android on smartphones after all

Writing about semiconductors and telecommunications.

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