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Xiaomi launches the Mi Note 10 and Mi Note 10 Pro, but they won't come cheap

Started by Redaktion, November 06, 2019, 13:03:35

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Redaktion

Xiaomi has just unveiled its newest devices in Europe, the Mi Note 10 and Mi Note 10 Pro. Sadly, both devices are unlikely to be as attractive as fans of the company expected. For one, both feature mid-range SoCs, while being rather expensive—the Mi Note 10 Pro sporting a hefty €649 MSRP.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/Xiaomi-launches-the-Mi-Note-10-and-Mi-Note-10-Pro-but-they-won-t-come-cheap.441346.0.html

yacc143

Don't forget that the EU prices are normally quoted with VAT, which averages around say 20%. If you add that to the Chinese price, you get $480 versus $600 which is still a difference but not as big.

(And you have to pay the VAT on importing it from China anyways.)

heffeque

Quote from: yacc143 on November 06, 2019, 14:10:45
Don't forget that the EU prices are normally quoted with VAT, which averages around say 20%. If you add that to the Chinese price, you get $480 versus $600 which is still a difference but not as big.

(And you have to pay the VAT on importing it from China anyways.)

Add compulsory 2-year warranty... and there you've got a bit more again.

Either way, for some strange reason, there's always a way to get them cheaper (buying them directly from China), but you lose the warranty and you risk having to pay import taxes.

S.Yu

Quote from: heffeque on November 06, 2019, 17:31:55
Quote from: yacc143 on November 06, 2019, 14:10:45
Don't forget that the EU prices are normally quoted with VAT, which averages around say 20%. If you add that to the Chinese price, you get $480 versus $600 which is still a difference but not as big.

(And you have to pay the VAT on importing it from China anyways.)

Add compulsory 2-year warranty... and there you've got a bit more again.

Either way, for some strange reason, there's always a way to get them cheaper (buying them directly from China), but you lose the warranty and you risk having to pay import taxes.
Is it really strange? With taxes and marketing and pricing strategy and all the price of goods is always somewhat distorted beyond their inherent value, creating opportunities. It's now this way for Chinese phones, especially as some global versions of Xiaomi firmware have less ads, reducing revenue on originally thin margins, but it's the other way for other phones. The HK version of Sony, Apple and Samsung is always cheaper than mainland China, the SK version of Samsung is almost always the cheapest around the globe.
Also clothes retailing for ~$200 could be had for CNY300-400 in China, unofficial channels of course, you need to look, and sometimes there are fakes, but those generally go for even cheaper or they fake far more expensive clothes in the first place, but I digress.

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