China iPhone delay a smuggler's dream

China iPhone delay a smuggler's dream

HONG KONG: The likely delayed launch of the iPhone 6 in China, the world's biggest smartphone market, sparked a race to pre-order the phone in Hong Kong on Friday.

Pre-orders for the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus sold out within two hours on Apple's Hong Kong website - and many of those devices are certain to be smuggled across the border into mainland China, where they could change hands for as much as four times the Hong Kong price.

The new models go on sale in the United States, Hong Kong and other markets on Sept 19, but consumers in China are still waiting for a release date, expected to be in late October.

Hong Kong residents went online to pre-order iPhones in the hope of selling them on for a tidy profit to unofficial dealers, many of whom will then move them into China to cash in on pent-up demand there.

A dummy iPhone 6 and a Steve Jobs statuette are displayed in a mobile phone shop at an IT mall in Hong Kong. (Reuters photo)

Apple did not release the number of sales for pre-orders.

"I'm worried about getting enough iPhones to resell. Orders have doubled compared to last year," said Gary Yiu, a salesperson at I Generation in Sin Tat Plaza in Mong Kok, Hong Kong's electronics hub.

His store is offering HK$10,000 (41,500 baht) for those willing to re-sell the latest model, almost twice the official local price of HK$5,588. Yiu said he had received more than 100 orders from Hong Kong and mainland China, double the number he had a year ago when Apple launched the iPhone 5S.

There are about 100 electronics dealers in Sin Tat Plaza and each bought 150 to 200 handsets immediately after the official release of the iPhone 5S last year.

In Shenzhen, across the border from Hong Kong, the asking price for the cheapest iPhone 6 model hit 20,000 yuan (105,000 baht), while a salesperson at a telecoms shop in Shanghai said his company had sent staff to Hong Kong, Japan and even the United States to buy the new models and get them back to China for sale.

"It's tough to say right now what price we'll ask. It really depends on market sentiment. It'll be decided by the asking price in the market," said the man who gave his surname as Zhang.

Typically, student "mules" from Hong Kong carry iPhones in their schoolbags or strap them around their waists and ankles each time they cross the border to the mainland. Some web users in China shared tips on how to smuggle iPhones into the country - such as opening the packaging so, if stopped, carriers can claim the phone was bought for their own use.

Others in Hong Kong were still weighing whether to resell their newest iPhone after securing a pre-order.

"It's all about luck," said IT officer Danny Lam, 28. "I kept refreshing. My F5 button almost broke.

"I may give it to my sister. I don't need this urgently, so I may check the price with traders. If the price is good, of course I'll sell it."

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