China's a fast-growing gold mine for Apple

The popularity of its phones and an expanding middle class is leading to record sales

Designed by Apple in California -- that nod to its home state has appeared on Apple products for years, but increasingly, Apple's gadgets are being sold far from its Cupertino headquarters.

In the first three months of this year, iPhone sales in China surpassed those in the US for the first time. Also for the first time, China jumped ahead of Europe as Apple's biggest overall market after the Americas.

Can the day be far off when Apple sells more in China than it does at home? The idea isn't as far fetched as you might think.

Thanks to the dominant role the iPhone plays in Apple's revenue and the considerable untapped demand among China's burgeoning middle class, sales aren't showing any signs of stopping.

Danny Yu, a 32-year-old in Beijing, is just one of the many iPhone users in the city. He says people are buying iPhones because the products are considered fashionable and the Apple brand is popular.

"In China, Apple is the famous brand," he said.

In the first quarter of 2015, the iPhone accounted for 69 per cent of the $UA58 billion revenue reported by Apple, a sizeable jump over the 57 per cent it represented in 2012.

China, which also includes Hong Kong and Taiwan in Apple's accounting, represented 29 per cent of all sales, compared with 37 per cent for the Americas. In 2012, the equivalent numbers were China at 20 per cent and the Americas at 42 per cent.

Apple may even be tailoring its product offerings to the growing market. The large-screen iPhone 6 Plus and the adoption of gold as a color option are widely considered plays to the preferences of Chinese consumers.

The strong demand in the first three months of the year comes with a caveat: the period included the Lunar New Year holiday, when sales are especially strong. But even so, the portion of sales made in China is clearly on the rise.

The signs of strong demand for the iPhone among Chinese consumers have been there for years. Stroll the lines at any of Apple's high-profile product launches in neighboring Asian countries, and they're often thick with people trying to buy one while on vacation from China or looking to buy products to send them back home.

And if a regulatory delay holds up launch of the phone, as it did with the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, Chinese customs agents invariably end up catching smugglers bringing thousands of the phones into the country.

Demand is such that the smugglers manage to sell their phones at a premium above Apple's retail price of 5,288 yuan to 7,788 yuan ($US843 to $US1256) for the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, which is already about $US200 above that paid by US consumers.

Those high prices mean a strong market for second-hand phones.

Electronics malls across the country do good business reconditioning or repairing used phones and selling them to customers who can't afford new ones. And Fulianwang, an e-commerce store owned by Foxconn, quickly sold out of used iPhones it sold online, saying demand was "exceptional."

Many iPhones in China are sold through the main carriers -- China Mobile, China Telecom and China Unicom -- because Apple is still just scratching the surface in China with its retail stores.

It has 19 serving 10 cities, which together account for a total urban population of about 100 million people, or roughly 13 per cent of China's urban population.

Apple plans to double its retail network in the country by the middle of 2016 and is also expanding its online delivery service, so it will be able to promise two-day delivery to 365 Chinese cities, up from 319 cities today.

It's all to serve China's middle class, which is growing fast.

In 2000, just 4 percent of urban households were middle class, according to an estimate by McKinsey China, which classifies the middle class as having an annual income of 60,000 yuan to 229,000 yuan. By 2012, that had risen to 68 per cent, and it is expected to hit 78 per cent of urban households by 2022 with the addition of an extra 170 million people to the middle class.

"I've never seen as many people coming into the middle class as they are in China," Apple CEO, Tim Cook, said in a conference call with investors this week. "That's where the bulk of our sales are going."

(Additional reporting by Michael Kan in Beijing)

Martyn Williams covers mobile telecoms, Silicon Valley and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Martyn on Twitter at @martyn_williams. Martyn's e-mail address is martyn_williams@idg.com

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