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Sun, Mar 21, 2010 - 06:41 PM EDT  —  AAPL: 222.2499 (-2.4001, -1.07%)  |  NASDAQ: 2374.41 (-16.87, -0.71%)

IDC: Apple iPhone nearly doubles shipments, grabs 16% share of worldwide smartphone market in Q409
Tuesday, February 09, 2010 - 10:05 AM EDT

The worldwide smartphone market (IDC now calls them "converged mobile devices") reached a new record level in a single quarter. According to IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, vendors shipped a total of 54.5 million units in the fourth quarter of 2009 (4Q09), up 39.0% from the same quarter a year ago. For the full year, vendors shipped a total of 174.2 million units in 2009, up 15.1% from the 151.4 million units in 2008. Converged mobile devices accounted for 15.4% of all mobile phones shipped in 2009, up slightly from 12.7% in 2008.

"Four of the top five vendors established new shipment records for a single quarter, indicating strong demand in the market," said Ramon Llamas, senior research analyst with IDC's Mobile Devices Technology and Trends team, in the press release. "Increasingly, mobile phone users are seeking greater utility from their devices beyond telephony and messaging, and converged mobile devices fulfill that need. To help address demand, carriers took advantage of lower prices on many older devices, ordering additional units and, in turn, offering reduced prices to end users. It was the perfect set of conditions to push shipments to a record level."

Market Outlook for 2010

IDC anticipates that ongoing demand will drive the worldwide converged mobile device market to a new shipment record in 2010, with additional impetus from the shifting landscape of mobile operating systems. "2009 was the coming-out party for Google's Android and Palm's webOS as both operating systems revealed new ways to surround the users with increased functionality," says Kevin Restivo, senior research analyst with IDC's Mobile Phone Tracker, in the press release. "More advances are in store for 2010 as Symbian and Windows are expected to unveil new versions of their respective operating systems. These and other operating systems will compete with attention-grabbing intuitiveness and seamlessness, a thriving mobile application library, and a compelling user experience that tightly holds on to the user. In the end, users will benefit from not only greater usability, but greater personalization and customization as well."

Top Five Converged Mobile Device Vendors, 4Q09

Nokia ended the year the same way that it began: as the undisputed leader of converged mobile devices worldwide. Nokia's shift to bring more touchscreen-enabled smartphones to market began to pay off, as its 5800, N97, N97 mini, and 5530 models drove both revenue and profits. In addition, Nokia quickly pointed out the competitiveness of its Eseries devices. While these results signify important milestones for the company's converged mobile device unit, it should be pointed out that reduced prices on many older models helped drive unit growth.

Research In Motion topped the ten million unit mark for the first time in the company's history. New device launches, including the high-end Bold 9700, touchscreen-enabled Storm 2 9550, and the mass-market targeted 8520, deepened the company's product portfolio, and lower prices on its popular Curve and Pearl models - in some cases being given away for free with a two-year service agreement - propelled shipments further.

Apple, with their iconic iPhone added another chapter to its short history by nearly doubling its shipments from the same quarter a year ago. Demand for the Apple iPhone continued unabated during the holiday quarter, and agreements with multiple carriers within the same market enabled further distribution. The fourth quarter also saw the launch of the iPhone at one of the world's largest carriers: China Unicom.

Motorola returned to the top five vendor list after a year-long hiatus. The company fulfilled its promise of launching its first Android-powered devices before the end of the year, and earned a warm reception as combined shipments of its DROID at Verizon Wireless and the CLIQ/DEXT at multiple carriers reached two million units in their debut. Motorola still offered versions of its legacy devices, including versions of the Windows Mobile-powered Q and the Linux powered MING A1800, RAZR 2V8, and Tundra in multiple markets.

HTC launched a new marketing campaign in 4Q09 showing how 'you don't need a phone, you need a phone that gets you.' This approach speaks to how its multifaceted devices align with users' multifaceted lives. While it may be too early to gauge the success of the campaign, it does bring the company's brand to the forefront. HTC continues to enjoy the success of its deep touchscreen-enabled device portfolio, and added the Android-powered Eris and Hero to its growing Android selection.

Top Five Converged Mobile Device Vendors, Shipments, and Market Share, Q4 2009 (Units in Millions)

Note: Vendor shipments are branded shipments and exclude OEM sales for all vendors.

Top Five Converged Mobile Device Vendors, Shipments, and Market Share, 2009 (Units in Millions)

Note: Vendor shipments are branded shipments and exclude OEM sales for all vendors.

Source: IDC Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, February 4, 2010

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Feb 09, 10 - 11:14 am Comment from: mike

Others = Windows Mobile? hehe

Feb 09, 10 - 11:31 am Comment from: @ mike

nope but a small part of others is smile

Feb 09, 10 - 11:33 am Comment from: silverhawk

I'll still take iPhones margin vs Nokia's margin when compared to profit.

Feb 09, 10 - 11:36 am Comment from: twilightmoon

Way too much credit given the iPhone also ran wanna bes.

And Nokia being the "undisputed leader" is a joke. That title belongs to Apple as far as revenue goes. A lot of the so called smartphones sold by Nokia are really just feature phones.

Feb 09, 10 - 11:37 am Comment from: Daner

Vendors, shipments and market share show Apple surging, but that is only a small part of the story. Include revenues and profits and it looks even better for Apple shareholders.

Feb 09, 10 - 11:44 am Comment from: Jubei

"in some cases being given away for free"

Yeah thats how RIM rolls... "We can beat Apple, lets just give one free POS away for every single POS purchased".

Feb 09, 10 - 11:58 am Comment from: Dallasm

Well, I looks to me like the only real loser here is WinMo.

Feb 09, 10 - 12:09 pm Comment from: twilightmoon

By revenue I meant net income, sorry. But it's close either way.

Feb 09, 10 - 12:12 pm Comment from: twilightmoon

Dallism

Nokia is taking it in the shorts, too. They just started out with a larger chunk of the "smartphone" market.

Feb 09, 10 - 12:24 pm Comment from: qka

Others = Windows Mobile?

HTC is/was a major WinCE/WinMo manufacturer, so, Others ≠ Windows Mobile

Feb 09, 10 - 12:54 pm Comment from: Troy

They still need to re define the term "Smart Phone' or give another category to the iPhone. You can not compare a CrapBerry curve or storm with the iPhone, or Nokia E80 or any of those crap phones.

Feb 09, 10 - 01:16 pm Comment from: bond co. stooge

I would like to know how it stacks up if you remove markets where apple is not a player...I bet that is what the other boardrroms look at, and wake up in a cold sweat over.

Feb 09, 10 - 01:19 pm Comment from: zmarc

I don't get that second chart: Nokia, HTC, and Samsung all went DOWN from 2008 numbers, yet their percentage of change went up? Shouldn't those be negative numbers?

Feb 09, 10 - 01:45 pm Comment from: Xavier

@zmarc
the percentage of change is for UNIT sales, not Share of Market (SOM).
But you pointed out something very important ! Nokia is losing share of market in units, and also moneywise (profits).

Feb 09, 10 - 06:29 pm Comment from: Jay

I was on the balcony of this nice pub the other day. All the tables were packed. I looked around and counted 14 iPhones sitting on tables from maybe 30 people on the balcony. How many had them in their pocket like I had mine?

Feb 09, 10 - 09:24 pm Comment from: Original Jake

Change in Q4 market share from 08 to 09 is the most important stat on these tables. Both Nokia and RIM were dead in the water with respect to market share, while Apple surged from 11.2% to 16.0% (a 43% increase!). At this rate, Apple will beat RIM's market share some time in 2010. (That doesn't even count the iPod Touch.)

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