Hon Hai Posts Surprise Profit Rise After Record iPhone Sales

Hon Hai Posts Surprise Profit Rise After Record iPhone Sales
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Hon Hai reported an unexpected rise in quarterly earnings after the main assembler of Apple’s devices rode record iPhone sales during the pivotal holiday shopping period, according to Bloomberg.

The world’s biggest contract manufacturer of electronics reported a 30 percent increase in net income to NT$68.8 billion ($2.3 billion) in the three months ended December, according to Bloomberg calculations derived from previously released data. That surpasses the NT$48.8 billion average of analysts’ estimates.

Hon Hai, better known as Foxconn, derives about half its sales from Apple. The world’s most valuable company shipped an unprecedented 78.3 million iPhones during the December quarter, despite its latest device representing a modest update on its predecessor. Optimism around Apple’s iPhone for 2017, the 10th anniversary of the iconic device, has driven the Taiwanese company’s stock close to a decade-high.

A turnaround at Japan’s Sharp, which Hon Hai and other units of Foxconn bought last August, is also contributing to the bottom line. The Osaka-based company last month reported its first quarterly profit in over two years. Hon Hai has defied a flat-lining mobile market on expectations Apple will use that milestone to introduce its most advanced and popular device yet.

Its revenue could climb 43 percent in the second half of this year from the first as the company starts to assemble the next-generation gadget, Citigroup analyst William Yang wrote ahead of the earnings. The Taiwanese company’s biggest client may ship 110 million next-generation iPhones in the second half of 2017, up from his earlier estimate of 100-million units.

Among the bells and whistles anticipated in the next iPhone are a sharper, power-efficient organic light-emitting diode screen; glass casing; wireless charging; a second front-facing camera; and enhanced waterproofing, according to Citigroup’s Yang. Hon Hai’s valuation hasn’t quite reflected the full impact of the new iPhone, particularly if it becomes the sole assembler for an OLED-equipped device, he said.