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Reading: 1.8%. That’s Apple’s Margin in China Right Now, and It’s Thinner Than It Looks
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1.8%. That’s Apple’s Margin in China Right Now, and It’s Thinner Than It Looks

Anderson Liam
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The China Academy of Information and Communications Technology (CAICT) released its April smartphone shipment data on Tuesday, and the headline figure for foreign-branded phones was a 1.8% year-on-year increase to 3.59 million units. Overall phone shipments in China rose 2.8% year-on-year to 25.73 million units for the month. The foreign-branded category covers a narrow slice of that total – roughly 14% of all units shipped – and is dominated by Apple’s iPhone. The number draws attention not because it is bad but because it is barely positive in a market that grew faster overall, and because the context in which Apple is operating in China in 2026 makes a 1.8% gain read very differently than it would have two years ago.

Apple’s position in China has spent the better part of 2025 and 2026 under specific pressure from domestic smartphone brands, particularly Huawei, Vivo, OPPO, and Xiaomi, all of which have upgraded their flagship lineups aggressively and now compete directly on camera hardware, AI feature integration, and premium pricing. Huawei’s Mate series re-entered the premium segment in late 2023 after semiconductor restrictions forced a multi-year hiatus, and the brand has maintained strong domestic sales momentum since. The competitive intensity at the top of the China market is what NewsTrackerToday flagged when the CAICT data arrived: a 1.8% gain for foreign brands against a 2.8% total market gain means foreign brands are, by arithmetic, losing share relative to domestic brands in April.

Sophie Leclerc, who covers the technology sector, puts the product cycle dimension into the read: “Apple’s April numbers in China carry a specific caveat: April is not a launch month. The iPhone 17 cycle is not yet in the data. What you’re seeing is sustain demand for the iPhone 16 series in a market where domestic competitors have launched new flagships since the fall. The more meaningful test is whether the iPhone 17 – whenever Apple launches it, likely September – resets the competitive dynamic or whether Chinese consumers have structurally shifted their premium-phone loyalty toward domestic brands. The April number alone can’t tell you that, but it doesn’t contradict the trend that has been developing.”

The question of whether the 1.8% represents stabilization or slow-motion erosion depends heavily on how you read the prior months. CAICT data for Q1 2026 showed foreign-branded phone shipments declining in both January and February year-on-year before recovering in March. The April figure holds the recovery but doesn’t extend it. Apple has responded to Chinese market pressure with localized AI features, deeper WeChat integration, and pricing adjustments on older models, all of which have helped maintain a floor under iPhone demand without necessarily restoring the share peaks of 2021-2022. The market intelligence CAICT data provides is granular enough to track the trend without being granular enough to call the turn, which is what NewsTrackerToday observed when comparing the April data against the Q1 trajectory.

Liam Anderson notes the investor read: “Apple’s China revenue is about 17% of total company sales, last disclosed. A 1.8% unit gain in April tells you the floor is holding but not that the ceiling is rising. The stock has priced in a recovery story partly based on AI features. If the iPhone 17 cycle lands in China with the same tepid response as the 16, that story gets complicated fast.” Bear in mind that the 25.73 million total units shipped in China in April represents only domestic-channel handset activations tracked by CAICT, excluding gray market imports and certain cross-border sales. The methodology means the absolute numbers undercount total iPhone presence in China to a degree. What News Tracker Today put the number in context to show is that CAICT’s foreign-brand figure is a directional indicator, not a definitive market share statement.

The May and June data will carry more weight than April for one specific reason: Huawei is expected to refresh its Mate series with new hardware in June, and Apple typically sees its weakest demand in the months before a launch cycle. If foreign-branded shipments hold above 3.5 million units in May despite that competitive pressure, the April 1.8% gain looks like genuine stabilization. If they drop back below 3 million, it looks like a one-month uptick inside a longer erosion trend. That is the number to watch, and it is the scenario that NewsTrackerToday maps as the Apple-in-China thesis test for the second quarter of 2026.

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Reading: 1.8%. That’s Apple’s Margin in China Right Now, and It’s Thinner Than It Looks
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