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Why the hottest phone company in the world won't sell in the US

xiaomi mi4 smartphone launch lei jun ceo
xiaomi mi4 smartphone launch lei jun ceo

(Jason Lee/Reuters) Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun introducing the Mi4. Xiaomi, the Chinese startup that makes really nice phones that cost half as much as the iPhone, is growing like crazy in emerging markets like China and India.

But the four-year-old company is not selling its phones in the US and other Western countries just yet.

Why?

According to Xiaomi VP Hugo Barra, who spoke at the Mobile World Congress on Tuesday, the US mobile market is very different from the emerging markets in which Xiaomi phones have been really successful.

For starters, US carriers already subsidize expensive phones like the iPhone, HTC One, and Samsung Galaxy S5. Those devices normally cost $650 or more, but carriers sell them for about $200 if you sign a two-year contract.

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That's a strange arrangement compared with the way other international carriers work. Outside of the US, customers buy phones at full price without help from the carrier. Xiaomi's phones usually cost $300 to $400 for the best models, so they make a very attractive offer to those who want a high-performance device but can't spend very much.

Barra also said Xiaomi's phones were not designed to work on the fastest 4G networks in the US, so it doesn't make sense to start selling there yet. Some of the internal components would need to be redesigned.

"Yes, we would love to be in the US with our flagship products, but it's not at the top of our priority list," Barra said.

In the meantime, Xiaomi will continue to focus on countries in which the carrier model is more in line with China's, with a big focus on India.



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