Smartphone maker Nothing to spin off its affordable CMF brand


Hardware startup Nothing said Thursday that it plans to make its affordable device brand, CMF, into an independent subsidiary with India serving as its headquarters for manufacturing and R&D.

The company first launched CMF in 2023 with a pair of earbuds and a smartwatch. Since then, it has introduced smartphones under the brand as well.

Nothing said that it is partnering with Indian ODM (Original Design Manufacturer) Optiemus to create a joint venture for manufacturing. While the startup didn’t reveal the ownership structure of this venture, it said that it aims to invest more than $100 million over the next three years, while creating over 1,800 jobs.

The London-based startup, following its $200 million funding round led by Tiger Global, didn’t say how much money from this round will go into setting up this new venture.

Nothing’s decision to choose India as CMF’s operational headquarters makes sense for a few reasons. CMF’s smartphones have been priced under $200, and that is the dominant category in India, with over 42% of phones shipped in Q2 2025 being in the $100-$200 price range, according to IDC.

India has also been Nothing’s strongest market with over 2% market share in smartphones. IDC told TechCrunch via email that Nothing was the fastest-growing brand in the country in Q2 2025, with 85% growth in shipments year over year.

“India will play a key role in shaping the future of the global smartphone industry. CMF has been well-received by the market since we launched it two years ago. With our end-to-end capabilities, we are uniquely positioned to now build it into India’s first truly global smartphone brand. Our joint venture with Optiemus is a key milestone toward making that vision a reality,” Nothing’s CEO Carl Pei said in a statement.

Techcrunch event

San Francisco
|
October 27-29, 2025

The company’s move comes after it poached Himanshu Tondon from Xiaomi’s spin-off brand POCO last month to be VP of Business for CMF.

Brand spin-offs have been increasingly common in the last decade, especially for brands based in China. Examples include Xiaomi spinning off POCO, Huawei selling off Honor, and Oppo making Realme a separate company.



Source link

Latest

Subnautica 2 might finally be entering early access in May

Subnautica 2 has weathered the storm and has...

Gemini screen automation rolling out to Pixel 10 series

Following availability on the Galaxy S26 last week,...

Legendary British spy novelist Len Deighton dies at 97

Over the weekend, legendary British spy novelist Len...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Subnautica 2 might finally be entering early access in May

Subnautica 2 has weathered the storm and has...

Gemini screen automation rolling out to Pixel 10 series

Following availability on the Galaxy S26 last week,...

Legendary British spy novelist Len Deighton dies at 97

Over the weekend, legendary British spy novelist Len...

Google’s Personal Intelligence feature is expanding to all US users

Google announced on Tuesday that it’s expanding Personal...

Kalshi’s legal troubles pile up, as Arizona files first ever criminal charges over ‘illegal gambling business’

Arizona attorney general Kris Mayes has filed criminal charges against prediction market platform Kalshi for allegedly operating an illegal gambling business in the...

Subnautica 2 might finally be entering early access in May

Subnautica 2 has weathered the storm and has rescheduled its early access release. IGN reported today that the sequel to the underwater survival...

Gemini screen automation rolling out to Pixel 10 series

Following availability on the Galaxy S26 last week, Gemini screen automation is now rolling out on the Pixel 10 series as part of...

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here