Nah. Huawei on the consumer front was 99% a smartphone brand.
That brand is now dead.
Going from 20% global smartphone marketshare to 4% in 3 quarters? That's dead. They're selling out existing stocks of decently specced phones (which they made a significant effort to build up when the ban was first put in place) and that is stopping them from dropping off the map entirely, but they are out of the running in every meaningful metric. Realme is the same size and Oppo is nearly 3x. And there's no reason to expect that trend to change either. Whether they have modems and routers (again, must be old stock, unless they're not ARM-based) and other peripheral products still available is largely irrelevant, as the size of those markets is nothing compared to the smartphone market. I agree that their laptops are good (and it seems like those aren't affected by the trade restrictions?), but they're a very small actor there, and the laptop market is still
tiny compared to smartphones. They're diversifying in order to stay afloat (monitors, TVs, etc.), but the best case scenario is for them to continue operating at a tiny fraction of their previous size. Going from a global communications powerhouse across infrastructure and end-user clients to a me-too competitor in a dozen minor markets, even if they make good products? That's pretty dead in my book.