After launching Windows 8 for mobile, is a smartphone next on the cards. AP
Microsoft
Corp is looking at making its own smartphone to kickstart sales of its
Windows mobile software, according to a Wall Street analyst who has
followed the company for many
years.
The talk – unconfirmed by Microsoft – comes a day after the company unveiled its latest Windows Phone 8 software, and the same week it announced
an own-brand tablet, signaling a break with 37 years of focusing on
software and leaving hardware manufacturing to its partners.
“Our industry sources tell us that Microsoft may be working with a contract manufacturer to develop their own handset for Windows Phone 8,” wrote Nomura analyst Rick Sherlund in a note to clients on Thursday.
“It is
unclear to us whether this would be a reference platform or whether this
may be a go-to market Microsoft-branded handset,” wrote Sherlund, who
covered Microsoft for Goldman Sachs when the bank brought Microsoft public in 1986.
Microsoft
did not confirm or deny the speculation. A spokesman said the company
was a “big believer in our hardware partners and together we’re focused
on bringing Windows Phone 8 to market this year.”
Windows Phone 8 is the latest version of Microsoft’s mobile software, set for release in autumn. So far, the software
giant has struggled to make a mark, with Windows-powered smartphones
taking only 2 percent of a worldwide market dominated by Apple Inc’s
iPhone and devices running Google Inc’s Android system.
Microsoft built its business on creating software
to be used on other companies’ hardware, but the success of Apple’s
iPhone and iPad have demonstrated that making both and integrating the
two smoothly has its benefits.
Microsoft
charted a new course this week by announcing two own-branded tablet PCs,
although doubts remain whether that was a move to invigorate hardware
makers or a genuine attempt to compete with its partners.
A similar
move in phones could make sense, and the company has little to lose by
trying its own handset, said another analyst, considering the strategic
importance of smartphones and poor sales of Windows phones.
“Microsoft
can’t afford not to have phones sell. They have to find a way of
selling it,” said Sid Parakh, an analyst at fund firm McAdams Wright
Ragen. “It’s a significant piece of their long-term vision of integrated
devices.”
If
Microsoft did make its own phone, it would be a blow for struggling
Finnish handset maker Nokia, which pledged to use Windows software in
its smartphones under a multi-billion dollar pact last year. If
Microsoft wanted to be in the handset business, it might even consider
buying Nokia, suggested Parakh, although he said that was unlikely.
Such a
move would also bring Microsoft into competition with Samsung
Electronics, HTC Corp and Huawei, which are slated to bring out new Windows phones later this year.
Microsoft
has experimented unsuccessfully with handsets before. It bought
fashionable phone designer Danger and developed a phone in-house called
Kin, which was pulled off the market months after launch in 2010.
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