IDC: Smartphone shipments fell 1.3% in Q2 2017, but Samsung, Apple, Huawei, Oppo, and Xiaomi all gained share


Smartphone vendors shipped a total of 341.6 million smartphones worldwide last quarter, down 1.3 percent from the 346.1 million units in Q2 2016. That’s a rare enough of an occurrence — the smartphone market. And yet, all five of the top vendors gained share: Samsung, Apple, Huawei, Oppo, and Xiaomi.

In Q2 2017, the South Korean company once again shipped more smartphones than any other vendor. Its American counterpart managed to ship just over half of that number, meaning the gap widened between the two. Meanwhile, the Chinese trio, as I like to call them, all shipped more smartphones than a year ago. The Q2 2017 figures come from IDC, which summarized its findings in the following chart:

As you can see above, Samsung’s market share increased 0.6 percentage points (from 22.7 percent to 23.3 percent) as it shipped 1.2 million more smartphones: 79.8 million. Every quarter, Samsung owns about a fifth of the market, and that remains true for the first two quarters of 2017. IDC believes consumers are responding well to the Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8+‘s edge-to-edge displays. Samsung’s more affordable A Series and J Series continued to perform well in both developed and emerging markets. Now the company just needs a winner with the Note8 to put its Note7 fiasco behind it.

Apple, meanwhile, gained 0.3 points (to 12.0 percent) as shipments were up by some 600,000 units to 41.0 million. Put another way, Apple did not benefit much from Samsung’s woes. Still, the iPhone 7 Plus outperformed the 6S Plus from a year ago. All eyes are now on the iPhone 7s, iPhone 7s Plus, and of course the iPhone 8 come September. For the iPhone 8, a larger AMOLED display, wireless charging, and increased performance are all expected.

Huawei gained 2.0 points (to 11.3 percent), hitting double digits for the first time. Furthermore, the Chinese firm is getting awfully close to Apple, as also pointed out by Canalys earlier today. The company needs to successfully penetrate the U.S. market at the carrier level if it wishes to remain competitive with Samsung and Apple.

Oppo increased 1.5 points (to 8.1 percent) and Xiaomi grabbed 2.3 points (to 6.2 percent). Chinese brands Oppo and Vivo last year pushed out previous fourth- and fifth-place players Lenovo and Xiaomi, but the latter has made a comeback. While the Android and iOS duopoly doesn’t look like it’s going away, the Samsung-Apple duopoly continues to erode as China’s smartphone market matures and local players look to the worldwide stage. Chinese value-packed devices offer the latest features at a fraction of the cost, compared to market leaders Samsung and Apple.

The fact all top five vendors saw positive shipment growth while the rest of the market contracted 16.0 percent shows just how much momentum the leaders have. 2017 is poised to be a rebound year for smartphones, but that doesn’t mean there won’t be losers.

“In my opinion, the biggest change in the second quarter is the size of the contraction among the ‘Others’ outside of the top 5 OEMs,” IDC vice president Ryan Reith said in a statement. “It’s no secret that the smartphone market is a very challenging segment for companies to maintain or grow share, especially as already low average selling prices declined by another 4.3% in 2016. The smaller, more localized vendors will continue to struggle, especially as the leading volume drivers build out their portfolio into new markets and price segments.”

VentureBeat

Post Author: martin

Martin is an enthusiastic programmer, a webdeveloper and a young entrepreneur. He is intereted into computers for a long time. In the age of 10 he has programmed his first website and since then he has been working on web technologies until now. He is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of BriefNews.eu and PCHealthBoost.info Online Magazines. His colleagues appreciate him as a passionate workhorse, a fan of new technologies, an eternal optimist and a dreamer, but especially the soul of the team for whom he can do anything in the world.

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