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Huawei, China's most popular brand of phones worldwide, has confirmed that it will not sell its new flagship devices, the Mate 20 and the Mate 20 Pro, in the United States.
A spokesman confirmed to Business Insider on Monday: "We do not plan to sell the Mate 20 series in the US Although international variations of the Mate 20 series are available on some US online retail sites, United, we encourage individuals to carefully read the details "about the warranty and network compatibility before buying. "
Huawei, however, plans to launch its new smart watch, the Watch GT, in the United States, but has yet to announce price or availability.
Huawei's statement suggests that fans will be able to buy European or Asian versions of the phone, but will have to check if their network supports imported devices. The Mate 20 series, for example, uses the GSM standard, but some US carriers, such as Sprint, only support CDMA.
The absence of the Chinese firm in the US market will probably disappoint Android fans who fail to easily get one of the most exciting versions of Android this year.
On October 16, in London, the company launched its Mate 20 series, unveiling the Mate 20, Mate 20 Pro and Mate 20 Pro X models. The company surpassed Apple in August to become the world's second-largest handset manufacturer behind Samsung, with a 15.8% market share, according to IDC data.
The Mate 20 Pro, from € 1,049, is expensive, but cheaper and more feature-rich than the $ 1,099 iPhone XS Max. Its outstanding features include fingerprint recognition on the screen, facial recognition, built-in artificial intelligence and an impressive triple-lens camera that takes great macro and wide shots. You can read the first look of Business Insider here.
The Mate series also goes against Google Pixel 3, Pixel 3 XL and Samsung Note 9. Forrester analyst, Thomas Husson, told Business Insider that it would probably be the best-selling Android smartphone before Samsung unveiled its new flagship product next year.
The United States suspects Huawei to spy on users for the Chinese government
Huawei started out as a telecom equipment company, but she drew attention to her well-built and feature-rich Android phones from 2013. She even briefly collaborated with Google to create one of her own Nexus phones.
However, by the end of 2017, the US government would have begun to put pressure on domestic carriers for that they do not offer Chinese phones to fears of espionage. The government has never publicly proven that Huawei was spying on customers, nor even exposing its concerns in detail.
What has happened publicly is that the US carrier AT & T has canceled an agreement to carry the Mate 10 Pro of Huawei, predecessor of the Mate 20 series, which was to mark the significant growth of Huawei in the United States . Bloomberg said Verizon had also dropped Huawei's phones and Reuters' Best Buy retailer would not offer them either.
This essentially forced Huawei to leave the United States, and at the time, mainstream mobile CEO Richard Yu reacted furiously. He said: ""[It’s] a big loss for consumers because they do not have the best choice in terms of appliances. "
Yu kept her calm this time by presenting the Mate 20 series, but the continued absence of the company in the United States is undoubtedly a blow.
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