2013年8月26日星期一

Japan’s largest wireless carrier, NTT DoCoMo, reportedly in talks to sell iPhone [feedly]


 
 
Shared via feedly // published on 9to5Mac // visit site
Japan's largest wireless carrier, NTT DoCoMo, reportedly in talks to sell iPhone
iPhone-5S-Champagne

iPhone 5S Champagne

Bloomberg is reporting that shares of NTT DoCoMo are rising on rumors that Japan's largest carrier will get the iPhone this year. The company's rivals, KDDI and Softbank (who just bought Sprint) both currently carry the iPhone and saw their share price drop in morning trading.

[DoCoMo]Chief Financial Officer Kazuto Tsubouchi said there are compelling reasons for Apple and his company to reach an agreement, according to an interview published in SankeiBiz. For Apple, it doesn't make business sense not to allow Japan's largest wireless carrier to sell the iPhone, while DoCoMo wants to be able to sell most popular handsets, Sankei said.

The original Sankei article is here (translated) with the relevant bit translated by 9to5Mac reader Kazuto Kusakari:

A new iPhone from Apple is expected in September. The Japanese market are paying close attention to whether NTT docomo will be selling the new model or not. Having sold two other models as their main phones in the past summer season, the company is ready, as the vice-president Kazuto Tsubouchi has commented "the only problem is WHEN we are going to sell it."…

Tsubouchi adds, "Nothing has changed. It will be difficult (to sell the iPhone on September 10th). But for Apple, it is not economically reasonable to not sell the iPhone on Japan's largest carrier. As for NTT docomo, we must sell phone the customers desire. It's a matter of terms.

Apple is also working on China's largest carrier, China Mobile, which also doesn't currently carry the iPhone. If Apple can hook one or optimally both of these two monster carriers, it will be able to sell significantly more iPhones in Asia.
Rumors of DoCoMo carrying Apple products including the iPhone have been going on for years.

The Wall Street Journal reported mid-November 2011 that negotiations with carriers in Asia came to a standstill because Apple was requiring iPhone sellers to commit to too large a volume. Additionally, NTT DoCoMo wanted to control what software goes on users' iPhones, a concession Apple was unwilling to make.

Image via SonnyDickson

Related articles



Sent from my iPhone 

沒有留言: