Ericsson, one of the world’s leading information and communication technology companies, had won 5G contracts from three major operators in China, said in a statement that there is likely to be a second-quarter write-down of about $109 million on product inventory in China due to high initial costs for new products.
Ericsson had warned in its first-quarter report that an increasing share of strategic contracts would hurt profitability in the second quarter, primarily due to negative gross margins in China. Ericsson shares, which have gained 7% this year, were down 2.2% in early trade.
China’s three largest telecom operators – China Mobile, China Telecom and China Unicom – have awarded 5G contracts worth billions of dollars this year, mostly to Huawei and ZTE, according to media reports.
Ericsson’s writedown was likely associated with free products given to the Chinese telecom companies and is not a real one-off and needs to be taken into the gross margin estimates, JP Morgan analysts wrote in a client note.
“This has always been an issue with China contracts in our opinion that they cause gross margin issues so though this announcement is not a surprise, investors will want further clarity on the extent of the impact,” the investment bank said.
Ericsson, which maintained its financial targets for 2020 and 2022, said while the deployment of 5G in China will hurt in the short term, it is expected to have healthy profitability over the life of the contracts.
European rival Nokia won a share of China Unicom’s 5G core network, but has been on the sidelines for larger China radio orders which often mean taking losses in the early years of a contract.