Unshackled ZTE needs weeks to get business on track

Bloomberg

ZTE Corp. will take several weeks to get its business back on track after gaining its freedom from a game-ending US technology ban, people familiar with the matter said.
The Chinese telecommunications equipment maker is dealing with a worker shortage as it awaits shipments of key components from US suppliers like Qualcomm Inc., the people said, asking not to be identified discussing internal matters. That’s hindering its ability to get plants up to full speed and ZTE may not hit peak capacity until August, the people said.
Washington lifted its moratorium on ZTE’s purchases of US technology on the weekend, resolving a months-long moratorium that choked off crucial components the Shenzhen-based company needs to make networking gear and smartphones. Investors have reacted with relief by sending its shares up more than 20 percent while China is said to be pushing
local carriers to consider boosting orders.
While the US ban was in place, the company shut down its major operations. Now that it has been cleared to resume business, ZTE is trying to mobilise workers but is having trouble convincing the thousands who hail from distant provinces to return to the fold, the people familiar said. Comprising as much as three-quarters of its factory force, they’d long scattered from ZTE’s base to return to their hometowns and can’t be recalled on short notice, the people said.
Compounding the issue, ZTE pays its labourers, often sourced from third-party agencies, less than other major employers in the region. The Chinese firm recently offered $1.95 an hour to prospective assemblers, according to a recruitment notice obtained by Bloomberg. That compares with the 21 yuan proffered by Foxconn Technology Group, Apple Inc.’s main manufacturer, according to the same notice.
ZTE declined to comment about problems securing workers and the time it will take to get operations up to speed.
While facilities in Shenzhen and the central Chinese city of Changsha began running, they remain well below optimum capacity, the people said. Some assembly lines had fewer than half the workers they needed as of Monday to function at top speed, though engineers are prepping to open more lines as employees come in. As recruitment continues, the labour shortage is expected to ease.
Meanwhile, ZTE’s sales teams in Europe, Southeast Asia and Latin America have begun reaching out to existing and potential clients, one of the people said. The company is concerned about losing business: it’s already said to have lost a $700 million contract to supply wireless equipment to Wind Tre SpA, to Ericsson AB.
ZTE won its reprieve by paying $1.4 billion in penalties, changing its entire board and appointing a new chairman.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend