Xiaomi is spinning off a premium smartphone brand it created for users in India as an independent company, a company executive announced on Friday.

Why it matters: The Beijing-based smartphone maker began its multi-brand strategy in 2018 in a bid to target different user segments and drive growth for its biggest business. Smartphones accounted for 60% of the companyโ€™s revenue in the third quarter.

  • Xiaomi sub-brands also include gaming phone Black Shark, budget phone brand Redmi, and Meitu, a smartphone brand it licensed from a selfie app maker.
  • The Poco brand has produced just one phone, the Rs 20,999 (around $295.6) Poco F1, which debuted in 2018 with the aim to take on high-end players in India such as Samsung, Huawei, and Apple.
  • Xiaomi is the biggest smartphone vendor in the country holding market share of roughly 26% as of the third quarter of 2019. Redmi phones are its most popular offerings in India.

Details: Xiaomi global vice president Manu Kumar Jain said in a tweet that Poco had โ€œgrown into its own identityโ€ and will become independent from Xiaomi.

  • โ€œPoco F1 was an incredibly popular phone. We feel the time is right to let Poco operate on its own,โ€ he said.
  • Details of the split have not been disclosed. Xiaomi did not immediately reply to TechNodeโ€™s inquiries on Sunday.
  • The Poco brand had a team of more than 300 employees working on research and development in Xiaomiโ€™s Shenzhen headquarters, according to a VentureBeat report in 2018 citing company executives.
  • The Poco team borrows resources from its parent whenever it deems fit and leverages Xiaomiโ€™s logistics and services infrastructure, the report said.

Xiaomiโ€™s Q3 growth slows amid dwindling smartphone sales, Huawei competition

Context: Xiaomi reported in November the companyโ€™s slowest-ever quarterly revenue growth since its July 2018 listing on the Hong Kong stock exchange. It has decelerated in the face of aggressive competition from rival Huawei in Chinaโ€™s saturated smartphone market over the past few quarters.

  • The companyโ€™s revenue in the third quarter rose to RMB 53.7 billion (around $7.8 billion) from RMB 50.9 billion the same period the year before, a 5.5% year-on-year increase.
  • The worldโ€™s fourth-largest smartphone maker split off its Redmi smartphone line in January 2019 in a bid to present Xiaomi as a premium brand.

Writing about semiconductors and telecommunications.

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