Home-grown smartphone maker Micromax launched its Canvas Laptab personal computing device at Rs 14,999 making its entry into the new segment, aims to position itself across "screen sizes" as the number of Internet users in India rise rapidly
Micromax Canvas Laptab
Home-grown smartphone maker Micromax launched its Canvas Laptab personal computing device at Rs 14,999 making its entry into the new segment, aims to position itself across "screen sizes" as the number of Internet users in India rise rapidly.
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Though the company makes about 90 percent of its revenue from phones, it plans to ramp up its non-mobile offerings including tablets, televisions, and 10-to-15 inch devices like the Laptab in the PC segment.
The company produces about a million units of all devices a month from its facility in northern India and should be able to double capacity within this financial year ending March 2016, he said.
While Jain did not give any financial details, he said that the company expects a 50 percent growth in annual sales and is profitable.
Micromax plans to enter "at least two new markets" in this financial year, he added, without giving details.
Micromax Informatics Ltd is looking to raise capital from private investors or through a stock market listing, as it expands into new business segments including personal computing, its co-founder said.
Micromax, backed by private equity firms including Sequoia Capital and TA Associates, has held discussions with a group of investors led by Japanese mobile telecom firm SoftBank Corp, Reuters reported last month.
Those talks were about the sale of a 20 percent for up to $1 billion, two people had said, which values the Indian firm at around $5 billion.
Vikas Jain declined to confirm any ongoing talks but said the company was also open to the option of an initial public offering of shares possibly on a local stock exchange.
"As we talk, both the options remain open. We have various (investment) i-bankers who have approached us with either of the options and we're given to understand that there is sufficient amount of interest in Micromax," Jain told Reuters in an interview.
Micromax, which entered the Indian handset market in 2008 with cheap large-screen phones, had hired banks in 2010 for an IPO to raise as much as $150 million but scrapped the plan a year later, citing poor market sentiment.
The company's main competitors in the world's third-largest smartphone market include Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and China's Xiaomi. Micromax is India's second largest smartphone vendor, after Samsung.