Apple plans to release its new iPhone in
August, a month earlier than expected, after sales were hit by new
big-screen models from its rivals, a major Taiwanese newspaper reported
Friday, citing supply chain sources.
The Economic Daily News quoted unnamed
sources as saying Apple had acquired parts from various Taiwanese
suppliers such as wafer maker Visual Photonics Epitaxy Co and Largan
Precision, a leading maker of lenses used in mobile phones, for the
handset expected to be called iPhone 6.
Taiwanese electronics contract makers
including Foxconn and Pegatron have also been notified by Apple to start
their assembly lines for the new handsets likely around late June, said
the mass-circulation national newspaper.
US-based Apple has decided to roll out
the 4.7-inch screen version of the new model in August, a month early,
as recent sales have been affected by the launch of bigger-screen phones
from rivals such as South Korean giant Samsung and Taiwan’s HTC, the
report said.
A high-end variant of the iPhone 6 with a
5.5 or 5.6-inch screen will still be unveiled in September as
previously planned, it said, adding that Apple expected total sales of
80 million units for both versions.
Japan’s Nikkei business daily reported
in March that Apple would release its next iPhone in September, its
latest salvo in the smartphone wars where it has lost global market
share to rivals such as Samsung.
Apple released its current iPhone 5 in September 2012 and newer versions in the series last year.
A number of top Taiwanese electronics
companies have been behind the production of the iPhone series by
supplying components or assembling the handsets.
The latest to come onboard is the
world’s biggest contract chip maker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing
Co. (TSMC), which reportedly started producing chips for the next iPhone
in February.
That news fed rumours that Apple is
reducing its reliance for parts on Samsung, its main competitor in the
mobile phone market and a bitter rival with which it is contesting
several copyright court battles globally.
The companies named in the Economic Daily News report declined to comment.
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