Worldwide Sales of Smartphones Grew by 5.4 Percent Year Over Year.
Samsung Suffered Its Worst Decline in Smartphone Sales.
Three Chinese vendors — Huawei, Oppo and BBK
Communication Equipment — together accounted for 21 percent of the
smartphones sold to end users worldwide in the third quarter of 2016.
They were the only smartphone vendors in the global top five to increase
their sales and market share during the quarter, according to Gartner,
Inc.
"China led the growth in the smartphone market in the third quarter of 2016," said Anshul Gupta,
research director at Gartner. "Sales of smartphones in China grew by
12.4 percent, and the vendors who most successfully exploited the sales
opportunities there were Oppo and BBK Communication Equipment.
In Oppo's
case, 81 percent of its smartphone sales came from China, while BBK
accounted for 89 percent of smartphones sales in China. These two
vendors also grew strongly in India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and
Russia," he added.
Global sales of smartphones to end users
totaled 373 million units in the third quarter of 2016, a 5.4 percent
increase over the third quarter of 2015 (see Table 1). However, overall
sales of mobile phones, fell by 1.3 percent, largely due to the
declining popularity of feature phones.
Samsung had a good start to the quarter,
but the battery problem that caused some Galaxy Note 7 smartphones to
catch fire led to lower sales of the company's high-end and high-profile
line of Note products. Samsung's smartphone sales in the third quarter
of 2016 as a whole declined 14.2 percent year over year — their worst
performance ever. Samsung's previous worst performance for smartphone
sales was a 12.3 percent drop in the fourth quarter of 2014.
"The decision to withdraw the Galaxy Note 7
was correct, but the damage to Samsung's brand will make it harder for
the company to increase its smartphone sales in the short term," said
Mr. Gupta. "For Samsung, it's crucial that the Galaxy S8 launches
successfully, so that partners and customers regain trust in its brand.
Apple's iPhone sales continued to fall in
the third quarter of 2016, with a 6.6 percent decline. Apple accounted
for 11.5 percent of the global smartphone market, its lowest share since
the first quarter of 2009. Apple's sales fell by 8.5 percent in the
U.S. and by 31 percent in China, two of its biggest markets. The iPhone 7
struggled to stimulate replacement sales.
Huawei is closing the gap with Apple. In
the third quarter of 2016, there was less than a three percentage point
difference in market share between them in the smartphone market. Highly
competitive and feature-packed Honor devices maintained their sales
momentum in markets around the world, with expansion into Europe and the
U.S. likely to help Huawei record another year of promising growth.
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