Android Expected to Reach Its Peak This Year as Mobile Phone Shipments
Slow
Framingham, Mass. -- The worldwide mobile
phone market is forecast to grow slightly more than 4.0% year over year in 2012,
the lowest annual growth rate since 2009, due to a sharp decline in the feature
phone market and sluggish global economic conditions. According to the
International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker,
vendors will ship a total of nearly 1.8 billion mobile phones this year,
compared to 1.7 billion units shipped in 2011. By the end of 2016, IDC
forecasts 2.3 billion mobile phones will be shipped to the channel.
The slow growth in the overall mobile phone market is primarily
due to the projected 10.0% decline in feature phone shipments this year. Many
owners of feature phones, sometimes known as "talk and text" devices,
are holding on to their phones in light of uncertain job and economic
prospects. Despite the decline in shipments, feature phones will still comprise
61.6% of the total mobile phone market this year.
In comparison, the smartphone market will largely offset the
feature phone decline with shipments forecast to grow 38.8% year over year to
686 million units this year. The high demand for smartphones is being fuelled
by high carrier subsidies, falling average selling prices and component costs,
increased awareness and device diversity, and lower-cost data plans among other
factors. As a result, smartphone purchases are an increasingly attractive
option for a growing number of users.
"The smartphone parade won't be as lively this year as it has
been in past," said Kevin Restivo, senior research analyst with IDC's
Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker. "The mobile phone user
transition from feature phones to smartphones will continue in a gradual but
unabated fashion. Smartphone growth, however, will increasingly be driven by a
triumvirate of smartphone operating systems, namely Android, iOS and Windows
Phone 7."
Smartphone Operating Systems
"Underpinning the smartphone market is the constantly
shifting OS landscape," added Ramon Llamas, senior research analyst with
IDC's Mobile Phone Technology and Trends team. "Android will maintain
leadership throughout our forecast, while others will gain more mobile operator
partnerships (Apple) or currently find themselves in the midst of a major
transition (BlackBerry and Windows Phone/Windows Mobile). What remains to be
seen is how these different operating systems -- as well as others -- will
define and shape the user experience beyond what we see today in order to
attract new customers and encourage replacements."
IDC projects Android will remain the most shipped smartphone
operating system over the course of the five-year forecast though its share
will peak this year. Increasingly, its share and growth will be driven by
Samsung sales. This Android stratification will happen even as more devices
powered by Google's mobile OS from a wide variety of phone makers enter the
market.
iOS will continue its impressive run thanks to strong iPhone 4S
momentum in North America, Western Europe, and Asia/Pacific, specifically
China, this year. Growth will moderate over the five-year forecast given the
large installed base Apple has accumulated, which means more of its addressable
market will be on replacement cycles. Emerging market growth is of utmost
importance if iOS is to gain share. Although a small market share decline is
expected, IDC expects significant overall shipment volume growth to continue
through 2016.
Windows Phone 7/Windows Mobile will gain share despite a slow
start. Windows Phone 7/Windows Mobile will be aided by Nokia's strength in key
emerging markets. IDC expects it to be the number 2 OS with more than 19% share
in 2016, assuming Nokia's foothold in emerging markets is maintained.
There will continue to be a market for BlackBerry OS-powered
devices, despite Research In Motion's current woes. This is true in emerging
markets, for example, where users are looking for affordable messaging devices.
However, the gulf between the BlackBerry OS and its primary competition will
widen over the forecast as the mobile phone market becomes increasingly
software/app-oriented and the "bring your own device" enterprise
trend proliferates.
The death knell of Symbian as a widely-used smartphone OS was
sounded last year when Nokia said all of its smartphones would eventually be
powered by Windows Phone OS. This announcement precipitated an Osborne-like
effect that resulted in a sharp decline in Symbian's market share. It also led
to share gains for competitive operating systems, namely Android and iOS. IDC
expects Symbian-powered smartphone shipments to all but cease by 2014. Clearly,
Nokia and Microsoft need to quickly switch Symbian OS user allegiances to
Windows Phone 7 in order to maintain relevancy in the smartphone race.
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