Apple chews away at Nokia, posts best smartphone share growth in Q1

Business

According to new data from IHS iSuppli, Apple’s smartphone market share increased 14.9% during the first quarter of this year — more than any other phone maker. The Cupertino-based company had a 19.2% grip on the smartphone market and shipped 18.6 million units during the first quarter. Nokia, the global smartphone leader, shipped 24.2 million units during the quarter and maintained a 24.9% share of the smartphone market, down 14.5% sequentially. RIM outperformed the market and shipped 14.8 million smartphones, placing it in third place with a 15.2% share, up 4.2% sequentially. It was followed by Samsung (13% share, 12.6 million units shipped), and HTC (9.9% share, 9.6 million units shipped). “Apple’s smart phone market share in the first quarter was boosted by the introduction of its first iPhone model with [CDMA] as well as by the addition of Verizon Wireless as a carrier in the United States,” said Tina Teng, senior analyst, wireless communications, for IHS. “Not only did this allow Apple to expand its target market and boost shipments, it also placed additional pressure on rival smart phone brands—including Motorola, Samsung, LG and HTC—that focus on Verizon Wireless as a major customer.” Hit the jump for the full release.

Apple Defies Decline in Smart Phone Market, Posts Best Growth Among Top Brands in Q1

May 9, 2011
Tina Teng

Bucking a rare downturn in the burgeoning smart phone business, Apple Inc. in the first quarter achieved double-digit-percentage growth in iPhone shipments and posted the best performance among the Top 5 competitors, new IHS iSuppli (NYSE: IHS) research reveals.

No. 2-ranked Apple in the first quarter of 2011 shipped 18.6 million iPhones, up 14.9 percent from 16.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2010. Apple’s increase represented the highest percentage growth among the world’s Top 5 smart phone brands, with No. 5-ranked HTC coming in a distant second given its 6.2 percent growth. It also marked a standout performance in a smart phone market that suffered a 1.5 percent sequential decline in shipments during the first quarter.

Smart Phone Ranking

“Apple’s smart phone market share in the first quarter was boosted by the introduction of its first iPhone model with code division multiple access (CDMA) as well as by the addition of Verizon Wireless as a carrier in the United States,” said Tina Teng, senior analyst, wireless communications, for IHS. “Not only did this allow Apple to expand its target market and boost shipments, it also placed additional pressure on rival smart phone brands—including Motorola, Samsung, LG and HTC—that focus on Verizon Wireless as a major customer.”

With its concentration on the U.S. market, Motorola was the one most impacted by Verizon’s addition of the iPhone, a factor contributing to Motorola’s 16.3 percent decline in shipments in the first quarter.

Gunning for No. 1
With shipments from Nokia, the No. 1 smart phone brand, declining by 14.5 percent during the first quarter, Apple made major strides toward achieving market leadership. Apple in the first quarter trailed Nokia by just 5.7 percentage points, compared to 12.2 points in the fourth quarter of 2010.

Nokia’s smart phone shipments declined to 24.2 million units in the first quarter, down from 28.3 million in the fourth quarter.

The company’s agreement with Microsoft Corp. to make Windows Phone 7 its principal operating system over the long term is having a negative near-term impact on its smart phone shipments. With the announcement of the deal, Nokia eliminated the incentive for consumers to buy its existing smart phone products, which are based on its Symbian and MeeGo operating systems. Meanwhile, the Microsoft deal is unlikely to yield any products for nearly one year.

A Bump in the Smart Phone Road
The decline in smart phone shipments in the first quarter represents the first sequential decrease since the beginning of 2009. While many electronic products typically suffer a sales slump during the beginning of the year following the peak selling sales season in the fourth quarter, the fast-growing smart phone has been immune to this phenomenon during most years.

However, IHS iSuppli does not believe the first-quarter results represent a long-term trend for the smart phone market.

“The reduction of shipments reflects inventory control efforts in the smart phone market, rather than weakening consumer demand,” Teng said. “This decline does not change the IHS iSuppli forecast of 60 percent growth in worldwide smart phone shipments for the entire year of 2011.”

Research in Motion Outperforms the Market
No. 3 smart phone brand Research in Motion (RIM) in the first quarter outperformed the overall market, with its shipments rising by 4.2 percent. The company benefited from success by expanding sales in regions outside North America. It also capitalized on the trend toward cell-phone-based monetary transactions with the announcement of several smart phone models that integrate near-field communications (NFC) technology. Furthermore, RIM continues to appeal to business customers who value the company’s focus on its service package and security as the key selling points.

Despite RIM’s above-average performance, the company lost ground on the No. 2 smart phone ranking to Apple. RIM in the first quarter trailed Apple by 4 percentage points, up from 2.1 points in the fourth quarter of 2010.

13 Comments
  • http://twitter.com/MrKow84 Kyle

    I didn’t know Nokia still made phones…
    After all they just laid off what like 3,000 employee’s ?

  • http://twitter.com/homescrub homescrub

    How is Nokia stilling making 24% in Q1 of 2011? I would of though that number would of been lower with its option to drop Symbian and get WP7.

  • Drew

    This all looks good for the short-term. Especially now since Nokia isn’t making very many phones at the moment (and still managing to put out 24 Million). What do you think will happen when Nokia starts pumping out those WP7 phones instead of Symbian?? Very soon, it won’t even be close…

    • Anonymous

      Ooooohhhh WP7 is such a threat!

  • Anonymous

    Gonna change when Nokia comes on stream with its new WP7 phones. I mean. who would possible want a locked in CrApple phone when you can have Microsoft? It’s no brainer. WP7 all the way.

    Microsoft FTW.

    • IamEzio

      who would possible want locked OS , with outdated hardware from they one , no multitasking , slow browser , and app store with 15,000 apps when you can get android or iOS ?

    • Anonymous

      How exactly is WP7 any less “locked in” than iPhone? They copied the iPhone model almost completely right down to the app store rules.

    • Anonymous

      Dude your just stupid with a comment like that;)

  • Anonymous

    Looks to me like LG got the best smartphone share growth. Am I missing something?

    • Jayhammy

      I was thinking the same thing. 60% growth for LG?

    • Drew

      Yeah, this was an article FROM Apple kiss asses TO Apple kiss asses and to ignore the obvious and make Apple look good…

    • Booboo44

      Agreed, it’s spinning it. Apple was the highest sequential growth among the “top 5″ vendors, but not for the group. That’s the only way to make Apple the highest growth %.

  • Anonymous

    Look at that, Nokia had huge growth in 2010, then it nose dived in Q1 2011. Wonder what could of caused that to happen..

blog comments powered by Disqus