China Unicom announces tighter iPhones regulations
Updated: 2010-11-30 11:03
By Tuo Yannan (China Daily)
Apple's iPhone4 went on sale in the mainland on Sept 25 at China Unicom and Suning Appliance Co stores. Four Apple stores in Beijing and Shanghai also started selling the product at the same time. [Photo / China Daily]
China Unicom goes after scalpers, makes it harder to change service
BEIJING - China Unicom, the official telecom carrier that offers iPhones in the Chinese market, announced on Monday that it will place even tighter restrictions on iPhone purchases to deter scalpers and stop iPhone users from leaving for its competitor China Mobile.
The new restrictions will take effect on Wednesday for new customers and will not affect existing customers.
According to the announcement, subscribers who buy iPhones from China Unicom must use it with the bundled China Unicom subscriber identity module (SIM) card. If the SIM card and handset do not match, the operator will block the mobile phone, freeze the deposit, and terminate any promotion associated with the contract.
Under the previous agreement, after an initial deposit, customers can get a free iPhone 4 with a bundled SIM card by buying the package from China Unicom.
The deposit should be returned once the contract expires. The deposit for a 16-gigabyte iPhone 4 with a two-year contract is priced at 5,880 yuan ($878), while the 32-gigabyte model retails at 6,999 yuan.
"The new rule aims at regulating the iPhone market," said Jake Li, an analyst at Guotai Junan Securities. "A lot of scalpers bought iPhone handsets and sold the card and the phone separately."
He pointed out that China Unicom subsidizes the cost of each iPhone, so China Unicom hopes to attract more subscribers who really need the handset and third-generation (3G) service, not scalpers.
"Otherwise it is a waste for China Unicom to subsidize the phone," said Li.
"China Mobile wants to maintain its second-generation (2G) customers so that iPhones can be used on its network to prevent users from joining China Unicom," said Li. Once China Unicom begins enforcing the new rules, new China Unicom customers will not be able to use 2G SIM cards in iPhones, he said.
Since Nov 22, mobile subscribers in Tianjin and Hainan have been allowed to switch operators among China's three telecom carriers.
According to the Chinese IT website Cctime.com, within one week, 65 percent of those who switched carriers transferred to China Unicom in Tianjin. According to China Unicom, the number of its 3G subscribers reached a record of 11.02 million users, of whom 20 percent were new iPhone 4 users. The company has received 600,000 pre-orders for the iPhone 4 since Sept 17.
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