TAIPEI: Taiwan’s struggling smartphone maker HTC posted a net loss of Tw$1.88 billion ($62.3 million) in the first quarter, a figure far worse than the Tw$1.59bn analysts forecast.

Sales in the three months to March fell to a five-year low of Tw$33.1bn.

HTC confirmed its unaudited first quarter loss was Tw$1.88bn, compared with a net profit of Tw$85m a year earlier.

Looking ahead, the company expected revenues to pick up from the second quarter due to the launch of the latest version of its flagship HTC One (M8) device and the mid-tier Desirer 816 targeting the Chinese mainland market.

But analysts cautioned against optimism, saying it would be a long way for HTC to regain ground in the market dominated by rivals Samsung and Apple as well as low-cost Chinese rivals like Lenovo and Huawei.

J.P. Morgan analyst Alvin Kwock said that it would be difficult for HTC to rebound because it cannot match the marketing budget of firms such as Samsung.

The South Korean tech giant spent $11.6bn in marketing expenses alone in 2013, compared with around $877m spent by HTC on “selling and marketing” last year.

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