
With
its hot-selling large-screen iPhones released last year, Apple has
roared back to the top of the pack with South Korea’s Samsung in the
smartphone market.
Surveys
released Thursday showed the popular iPhone 6 and 6 Plus helped Apple
pull to a virtual tie in the fourth quarter with Samsung, which has been
the leader for the past three years.
The
research firm Strategy Analytics said Apple and Samsung shipped 74.5
million smartphones each in the last three months of 2014 for a market
share of just under 20 percent. A separate survey by IDC analysts said
Samsung had a tiny edge over Apple with 75.1 million units sold. Apple
“beat everyone’s expectations,” said Ryan Reith at IDC.
Even
more surprising is that Apple managed to increase the average selling
price of its phones at a time when many consumers around the world are
looking to low-cost handsets.
Another
surprise was growth of iPhone sales in the US, “which is considered a
saturated market,” according to Reith, and in China, where competition
is intense.
“Sustaining
this growth and higher (selling prices) a year from now could prove
challenging, but right now there is no question that Apple is leading
the way,” Reith said in a statement.
Samsung,
which belatedly entered the market pioneered by Apple, had dethroned
the US firm as the world’s top smartphone vendor in the third quarter of
2011. The South Korean electronics giant then went on to replace Nokia
as the global leader in overall mobile phone sales in the first quarter
of 2012.
But
Strategy Analytics said Samsung now faces “intense competition from
Apple at the higher-end of the smartphone market, from Huawei in the
middle-tiers and from Xiaomi and others at the entry-level.”
“Samsung may soon have to consider taking over rivals, such as Blackberry, in order to revitalize growth this year,” it added.
Even
Apple has been surprised by its growth. Chief executive Tim Cook said
during an earnings call this week that iPhone demand “has been
staggering, shattering our high expectation.”
IDC’s
Ramon Llamas told AFP that Apple is still seeing strong demand in early
2015 but that “it’s going to be difficult to maintain that breakneck
pace.” He added that “the fact that they attracted a number of Android
users gives them growth prospects for 2015.”
Analysts
said the smartphone market appears to be diverging with Apple
dominating the high end and other manufacturers scrambling at the low
end.
“There’s
been so much skepticism for so many years about Apple’s ability to
continue to make its unique business model work over the long term, and
Apple continues to prove them wrong,” said Jan Dawson at Jackdaw
Research in a blog post.
Rise in China
IDC
said overall global smartphone sales hit a new record for the quarter
and for the year: 375.2 million units shipped during the fourth quarter,
a 28 percent increase from a year earlier, bringing the annual total to
1.3 billion, a gain of 27.6 percent.
Strategy
Analytics said more than a billion Android-powered phones were sold
last year, representing 81 percent of all handsets. Chinese firms made
headway in the smartphone market, led by Lenovo, which completed its
acquisition of the Motorola brand last year.
IDC
said Lenovo sold 24.7 million units for a 6.6 percent market share,
edging out Huawei which delivered 23.5 million for a 6.2 percent share,
according to IDC.
The
rising Chinese star Xiaomi captured the number five spot, selling 16.6
million units with a 4.4 percent market share. Xiaomi’s growth from a
year ago was 178 percent, IDC said.
But
“Xiaomi’s grip on the number five spot is tenuous at best, with (South
Korea’s) LG and (China’s) ZTE following close behind,” the IDC report
said.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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