Apple misses out on big 2024 smartphone market rebound, says IDC
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Apple and its rivals will ship 6.2 per cent more phones, or an estimated 1.24 billion units, in 2024.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Global smartphone sales rebounded strongly in 2024 after two successive years of decline, but Apple barely managed growth, an independent study showed, underscoring the speed with which Android-based rivals are gaining ground in China and emerging markets.
Apple and its rivals will ship 6.2 per cent more phones, or an estimated 1.24 billion units, in 2024, according to market tracker International Data Corporation (IDC).
But iPhone volumes likely edged just 0.4 per cent higher.
Still, Apple remains by far the profit leader, with an average selling price surpassing US$1,000 (S$1,343), while Android rivals collectively came in at around US$295, IDC estimates.
The latest study highlights the uneven recovery of the smartphone market, which slumped in the post-Covid-19 era despite the advent of artificial intelligence (AI).
Much of that 2024 growth came from pent-up demand and regions with lower smartphone penetration, IDC said.
More affordable devices from Android vendors helped Chinese brands better capture that opportunity, while Apple is forecast to fare better in 2025.
The addition of AI enhancements,
“While GenAI (generative AI) continues to be a hot topic and top priority for many vendors, it is yet to impact demand significantly and drive early upgrades,” said IDC research director Nabila Popal.
“More investments are needed to increase consumer awareness and introduce a ‘must-have’ feature that will rush consumers to the store and create that super cycle which everyone is waiting for.”
Brands like Xiaomi and Huawei Technologies are pouring investment into hardware and designing their own processors – in a bid to mitigate the threat or effects of US sanctions while customising their designs for AI use cases.
Huawei on Nov 26 introduced its latest smartphone powered by its made-in-China chips, while Xiaomi is preparing an in-house semiconductor for 2025 devices.
In China’s highly competitive market, where half a dozen companies trade the top spot each quarter, large and prolonged discounts stimulated sales.
Those had more of an effect than in the previous year, though concern about the country’s ailing economy is likely to persist.
Globally, shipments have yet to return to pre-pandemic levels, and IDC does not expect anything more than low single-digit growth for years to come.
Lengthening times between upgrades, market saturation in developed economies and a rapidly growing trade in used smartphones are seen as the major factors contributing to stagnation. BLOOMBERG


