MacDailyNews - Where Mac news comes first

 MacDailyNews Poll

Deal of the Day

5 Day Most Commented

Opinion Archive

Current Headlines

Latest Joy of Tech

  • Latest Joy of Tech!

MacNN

AppleInsider

Macworld UK

TUAW

MacRumors

Yahoo! Finance AAPL

iTunes Top 10 Albums

Mac OS X Downloads

Tue, Feb 09, 2010 - 10:32 AM EST  —  AAPL: 196.59 (+2.47, +1.27%)  |  NASDAQ: 2150.19 (+24.14, +1.14%)

Gartner: Apple iPhone smartphone market share more than doubled in fourth quarter 2008
Wednesday, March 11, 2009 - 01:12 PM EST

In the fourth quarter of 2008, worldwide sales of smartphones to end users reached 38.1 million units, an increase of 3.7 per cent on the fourth quarter of 2007, according to Gartner, Inc. Global sales of smartphones for 2008 reached 139.3 million devices, up 13.9 per cent compared with 2007.

“After a strong third quarter with new product introductions, sequential growth slowed down again in the fourth quarter as fewer compelling new products and the worsened economic climate continued to make data plans associated with smartphones out of reach for most consumers,“ said Roberta Cozza, research director at Gartner. “In general in 2008, the focus from vendors and operators on increasing their smartphone portfolios remained very strong. Samsung, RIM, HTC and Apple saw their volumes and share increase during 2008 (see Table 2), thanks to their ability to offer compelling device experiences and touch interfaces.”

As a proportion of all mobile device sales, smartphones remained stable at 12 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2008, from 11 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2007. Samsung entered the top five vendors ranking for the first time (see Table 1), replacing Sharp. RIM recorded an increase in sales both sequentially and year-over-year, while Nokia's volumes continued to fall.

Table 1
Worldwide: Smartphone Sales to End Users by Vendor, 4Q08 (Thousands of Units)


Note: Under the name HTC, Gartner counts only the company's own-branded devices. The devices that HTC designs for mobile operators are shown separately under the operators' names in these statistics.
Source: Gartner (March 2009)


MacDailyNews Note: On January 21, 2009, Apple reported sales of 4.363 million iPhones for the fourth calendar quarter of 2008. Gartner's number is more than a quarter million units short: 283,600 units to be precise.

Nokia maintained its No. 1 position, but in the fourth quarter of 2008 its smartphone sales declined by 16.8 per cent year-on-year. This also contributed to the overall weakness of the global smartphone segment in 4Q08, as the company commanded 40.8 per cent of the market. Nokia’s entry-level smartphone range will continue to offer good value for the money, but Nokia remains more exposed to pressure from competition in the higher end of the consumer smartphone market as the Nseries loses its appeal.

Apple’s initial sell-through dropped significantly as sales fell during the fourth quarter. Nevertheless, Apple maintained its third position in the global rankings. Apple built an inventory of about two million iPhone units in the third quarter of 2008 which did not reduce significantly in the fourth quarter. With Apple’s sequential decline, volumes were driven by new product introductions such as the RIM Storm, the T-Mobile G1 (the first product based on Google’s Android platform), and strong performance from Samsung’s touchscreen products. HTC had a very strong quarter with record sales of its HTC-branded devices and operator-branded devices.

Table 2
Worldwide: Smartphone Sales to End Users by Vendor, 2008 (Thousands of Units)


Note: For HTC we only count the company's own-branded devices. The devices that HTC designs and which have the operator's brand are given separately under the operator’s name in our statistics.
Source: Gartner (March 2009)


In the smartphone operating system (OS) market, Symbian's share of the global market decreased to 47.1 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2008, down from its 2007 share of 62.3 per cent (see Table 3). Pressure from new platforms entering the consumer space, the continued decline of Nokia's smartphone sales and the weakness of the Japanese mobile device market have negatively affected Symbian's share. Meanwhile, RIM successfully grew its year-on-year share of the global smartphone market to 19.5 per cent from 10.9 per cent. Gartner estimated that Android smartphones accounted for 20 per cent of total Linux sales in the fourth quarter of 2008.

In the fourth quarter of 2008, Microsoft's share of the global smartphone market improved sequentially, with unit sales up 16 per cent over 3Q08. This was mainly driven by the popularity of Samsung Omnia and touchscreen products from HTC. Sales of Linux-based smartphones were up by 19 per cent year-over-year, mainly through Android-based smartphones being available through T-Mobile during the fourth quarter of 2008.

Table 3
Worldwide: Smartphone Sales to End Users by Operating System, 4Q08 (Thousands of Units)


Note: The "Other OSs" category includes sales of Sharp Sidekick devices based on the Danger platform.
Source: Gartner (March 2009)


Table 4
Worldwide: Smartphone Sales to End Users by Operating System, 2008 (Thousands of Units)


Note: The "Other OSs" category includes sales of Sharp Sidekick devices based on the Danger platform.
Source: Gartner (March 2009)


On a regional level, the North American smartphone market continued to grow, despite the larger economic problems. Smartphones account for roughly 20 per cent of sales in this region, a dramatic increase over the past year. Smartphone sales in North America grew 69 per cent in 2008. While sales will grow at a slower pace, the market will be driven by support from operators in the region aggressively pushing data plans. Smartphones will also see increased competition from full-featured enhanced phones that may offer a full qwerty keyboard. These devices offer much of the functionality of a smartphone, but at a lower price.

Smartphone sales in Asia/Pacific recorded a 2.3 per cent sequential growth, reaching 7.5 million unit sales, even though overall mobile device sales dropped by 9.2 per cent. The drop in overall sales was attributable to weak consumer confidence, but sales of high-end devices remained good, leading to positive sequential growth for smartphones. Market leader Nokia lost market share marginally by 2 per cent to Apple. Others that gained in the region were RIM and Samsung. Touch-based devices continued to attract consumers in this segment.

Smartphone sales in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) were up by only 2 per cent in 4Q08 compared with the same period last year. Despite replacement purchases slowing down in Western Europe, smartphone sales still recorded a 9.6 per cent increase in the region. Samsung was the main contributor to the growth in Europe thanks to the success of its Omnia touchscreen smartphone. Samsung's share nearly tripled during the fourth quarter of 2008 and the strong push of its touchscreen offerings in EMEA put pressure on HTC.

Ms Cozza concluded: “In 2009, mobile platforms will be a major battleground as the associated user experience and role of the ecosystem grow in importance.”

Additional information is available in the Gartner report "Market Share: Smartphones, Worldwide, 4Q08 and 2008". The report is on Gartner’s website here.

Bookmark and Share

Always -- Free ground shipping with orders over $50 at the Apple Store.

Reader Feedback: = registered.
Unregistered users: Feedback from multiple usernames are subject to deletion. Off-topic and posts from suspected astroturfers will be removed.

Mar 11, 09 - 12:21 pm Comment from: Wandering joe

Wonder how Uncle Fester likes those numbers!

Mar 11, 09 - 12:23 pm Comment from: Wandering joe

Oops, I meant wander. It's hard living up to a name!!

Mar 11, 09 - 12:34 pm Comment from: ralph from berlin

gartner is making their numbers up. apple sold 4,36 million iphones in q4, not 4,1 million. for apple selling means selling to the carriers (that's the point where money is exchanged) as with any other handsetmaker. there are no metrics to determine how many phones were sold to "end users". they are just making guesses. hardly facts to me. let's stick with the real numbers the companies have to provide, not rough etimates from a "research" firm.

Mar 11, 09 - 12:43 pm Comment from: Jake

Can't wait till OS X overtakes Windows Mobile in the smartphone market!! Looks like it will happen this year.
Go Apple!

Mar 11, 09 - 12:45 pm Comment from: mike_in_helsinki

This does not say who captured all of the profits.

Apple took the majority of the profits. That is what no one seems to get. Apple's market share numbers are nothing compared to the percentage of the profits they took off the table.

Mar 11, 09 - 12:52 pm Comment from: monkeybiz

finland mike makes a good point - however, don't forget the smartphone business is growing massively and we are still in somewhat of a land grab phase, so it may make sense to give up a little in the way of short term profits for mkt share gains and platform adoption. just a thought.

Mar 11, 09 - 12:53 pm Comment from: Jim

Interesting analysis by them. Wonder if they know "Mac OS X" is on exactly 0 smartphones. OS X is on all Apple branded smartphones though.

Mar 11, 09 - 01:09 pm Comment from: d

RIM had very similar growth. If I was them, I would be happy with that.

Mar 11, 09 - 01:15 pm Comment from: Turley Muller

Apple not only sold 4.36M units, channel inventory fell by 250K units, thus Apple sold about 4.6M units to end-users WW

Mar 11, 09 - 01:18 pm Comment from: KenC

Yep, Turley is right, Apple SHIPPED 4.36M iPhones, but SOLD 250k more, as they let inventory drop by that amount, for a sell-thru of about 4.6M iPhones.

Listen to the conference call when this is discussed or you can read the transcript at seekingalpha.com

Mar 11, 09 - 02:55 pm Comment from: Gary

All those figures make no sense to me at all until i see the total amount of profit made by those companies from selling their handsets or software. I believe, Apple must have made the largest amount of money from the cellphone business compared to all the other competitors which is the ultimate aim of any business and the real oxygen to survive longer.

Mar 11, 09 - 07:34 pm Comment from: NewtonsApple

And to think Apple has grabbed that amount of the market with 2 generations of a single model. That's impressive.

Mar 12, 09 - 12:43 am Comment from: MobileMe

Where are revenue share numbers? It is my assertion that in revenue share Apple would be number 3 or 2. What about the profit numbers? Who banked the most $$$?

Market share (especially unit share) numbers as a stand alone measure are USELESS!

Dec 19, 09 - 11:40 am Comment from: Lily28

That can be really viable to purchase masters thesis referring to this good post in the dissertation writing service particularly when students are pressured for time.

Reader feedback page 1 of 1 pages:

Always -- Free ground shipping with orders over $50 at the Apple Store.

Add Your Feedback:

Register or Login

Name:

Email: (optional)

Emoticons | Allowed HTML Tags

Remember my info   Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please enter the "MDN Magic Word" you see in the image below: