Menu
New Zealand smartphone sales up by 1.3 per cent

New Zealand smartphone sales up by 1.3 per cent

Huawei overtakes Apple in second spot for global sales

Credit: Dreamstime

The New Zealand smartphone market saw marginal growth with sales growing 1.3 per cent to 320,200, compared to sales of 316,100 in the same quarter last year, according to research firm Gartner.

Of the top-performing vendors globally, Samsung retained the top spot followed by Huawei and Apple, which collectively accounted for almost half the worldwide market.

Huawei achieved the highest year-over-year growth among the top five vendors, with smartphone sales growing by 44.5 per cent year-on-year to 58.4 million units. In particular, the brand saw strong growth in Europe and Greater China, where its smartphone sales grew by 69 per cent and 33 per cent, respectively.

However, despite a buoyant quarter, Gartner warned of uncertain times ahead for the Chinese giant, claiming it will “struggle not to lose market share in the remainder of 2019” due to US sanctions and Google pulling the company’s Android licence.

“Unavailability of Google apps and services on Huawei smartphones, if implemented, will upset Huawei’s international smartphone business which is almost half of its worldwide phone business,” Gartner senior research analyst Anshul Gupta said.”Not the least it brings apprehension among buyers, limiting Huawei’s growth in the near term.”

Although Huawei is propped up by strong sales in China, where it commands 29.5 per cent market share, and is already “nearly absent” from the US, other research has predicted Huawei sales could tumble between four per cent and 24 per cent this year, and may even  “disappear from international markets” altogether.

Meanwhile, although Samsung retained the top spot with unit sales totalling 71.6 million − or 19.2 per cent market share − its Q1 sales fell by 8.8 per cent.

Apple iPhone sales reached 44.6 million units in the first quarter of 2019, a decline of 17.6 per cent year-on-year.

“Demand for premium smartphones remained lower than for basic smartphones, which affected brands such as Samsung and Apple that have significant stakes in high-end smartphones,” Gupta said. “In addition, demand for utility smartphones declined as the rate of upgrading from feature phones to smartphones has slowed, given that 4G feature phones give users great advantages at a lower cost.”

Chinese vendors Oppo and Vivo meanwhile propped up the top five most popular brands, selling 29.6 million and 27.3 million units, respectively.


Follow Us

Join the newsletter!

Or

Sign up to gain exclusive access to email subscriptions, event invitations, competitions, giveaways, and much more.

Membership is free, and your security and privacy remain protected. View our privacy policy before signing up.

Error: Please check your email address.

Tags smartphone

Featured

Slideshows

How MSPs can capitalise on integrating AI into existing services

How MSPs can capitalise on integrating AI into existing services

​Given the pace of change, scale of digitalisation and evolution of generative AI, partners must get ahead of the trends to capture the best use of innovative AI solutions to develop new service opportunities. For MSPs, integrating AI capabilities into existing service portfolios can unlock enhancements in key areas including managed hosting, cloud computing and data centre management. This exclusive Reseller News roundtable in association with rhipe, a Crayon company and VMware, focused on how partners can integrate generative AI solutions into existing service offerings and unlocking new revenue streams.

How MSPs can capitalise on integrating AI into existing services
Access4 holds inaugural A/NZ Annual Conference

Access4 holds inaugural A/NZ Annual Conference

​Access4 held its inaugural Annual Conference in Port Douglass, Queensland, for Australia and New Zealand from 9-11 October, hosting partners from across the region with presentations on Access4 product updates, its 2023 Partner of the Year awards and more.

Access4 holds inaugural A/NZ Annual Conference
Show Comments