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Smartphone sales exploded in 2012: surveys

Agence France-Presse

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Survey data shows that global smartphone sales soared in 2012, taking a huge slice of a mobile market that was otherwise flat

SMARTPHONES. Apple's Iphone and Samsung's Galaxy. Photo from AFP

WASHINGTON, USA – Global smartphone sales soared in 2012, taking a huge slice of a mobile market that was otherwise flat, survey data showed Friday, January 25.

Research firm Strategy Analytics said global smartphone shipments grew 43 percent to 700 million units in 2012, with South Korea’s Samsung capturing more than 30 percent of the market and extending its lead over Apple and others.

The report showed smartphones accounted for close to half of the 1.6 billion mobiles sold in 2012. With all phones combined, the market grew just two percent, according to the report highlighting a shift to smartphones.

The report showed Apple holding 19.4 percent of the global smartphone market, trailing Samsung at 30.4 percent.

“Samsung and Apple together accounted for half of all smartphones shipped worldwide in 2012,” said Linda Sui at Strategy Analytics.

“Large marketing budgets, extensive distribution channels and attractive product portfolios have enabled Samsung and Apple to tighten their grip on the smartphone industry.”

The survey showed Nokia retained its position as the third largest smartphone vendor for 2012 but that its market share fell sharply from 16 percent to five percent.

ABI Research said in a separate report that 653 million smartphones were shipped during the year, more than 40 percent of the 1.6 billion handsets.

That survey showed Samsung with 31 percent of total smartphone shipments to 21 percent for Apple. But ABI said Apple appears to be facing tougher competition.

“It is clear that the iPhone’s hyper growth has ended, and ABI Research believes that Apple’s market share will peak in 2013 at 22 percent,” said analyst Michael Morgan.

“Unless Apple is willing to trade iPhone margins for low cost iPhone shipments, Apple’s handset market share will become dependent on customer loyalty.” – Rappler.com

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