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Gartner: 2010 Mobile
Device Sales to Rise 9%
December 15, 2009
Stronger
than expected sales in Western Europe and an acceleration in the grey
market in the third quarter of this year will drive worldwide mobile
device sales to end users to 1.214 billion units, a 0.67 per cent
decline from 2008. In September, Gartner had forecast sales to decline
3.7 per cent in 2009. Gartner now predicts sales in 2010 will show a 9
per cent increase from 2009.
“Although the grey market or ‘white label’ is not a new phenomenon and
has been generated by Chinese device manufacturers who do not have a
licence to sell and manufacture devices without a valid international
mobile equipment identity (IMEI), today grey-market sales are no longer
limited to China,” said Carolina Milanesi, research director at Gartner.
“All manufacturers will have to compete with grey-market players as they
expand into emerging markets in Asia/Pacific, Eastern Europe, the Middle
East and Latin America and bring a lower weighted average selling price
(ASP). The grey market will affect Nokia’s market share the most.”
In 2009, overall market economic conditions impacted disposable income
and extended replacement cycles in mature markets from 12 to 18 months.
Gartner expects replacement cycles globally to return to normal within
two years, with the introduction of more aggressively priced smartphones
and shorter contracts. Gartner also expects second-hand sales in
emerging markets and SIM-only sales globally to stabilize in 2010 and to
start decreasing from 2011 as consumers feel less macro-economic
pressure.
Smartphone
volumes will represent 14 per cent of total mobile devices sales in
2009, growing by 23.6 per cent from 2008 and to 38 per cent by 2013.
However, this positive outlook could be negatively impacted by mobile
operators' decision to associate all smartphones with high flat-rate
data plans, which could increase the total cost of ownership beyond
mass-market consumer acceptance. Despite this, Gartner expects global
ASPs for enhanced phones and smartphones to decline by 3 per cent in
2010.
The strong performance of markets such as Western Europe and Asia
Pacific was balanced by weaker than expected sales in Latin America and
the Middle East and Africa (see Table 1).
Table 1
Forecast: Mobile Terminal Sales to End Users,
Worldwide, 2007-2011 (Thousands of Units)
|
Region |
2008 |
2009 |
2010 |
|
Asia/Pacific |
453,100.1 |
479,862.6 |
546,770.8 |
|
Eastern Europe |
96,068.0 |
81,145.1 |
84,995.0 |
|
Japan |
40,588.1 |
34,871.7 |
34,897.9 |
|
Latin America |
142,323.1 |
119,737.5 |
126,772.7 |
|
Middle East and Africa |
133,471.9 |
128,879.6 |
140,305.1 |
|
North America |
182,245.8 |
182,571.6 |
190,130.8 |
|
Western Europe |
174,455.3 |
186,950.5 |
198,498.9 |
|
Worldwide |
1,222,252.30 |
1,214,018.60 |
1,322,371.20 |
Source: Gartner
(December 2009)
“Despite a projected return to growth in 2010, the times of 20 per cent
growth are certainly over as mature markets are saturated and most
growth will come from emerging markets,” concluded Ms Milanesi.
“Pressure will remain for manufacturers to sustain and grow margins as
ASP continues to decline. Software, services and content will be much
bigger drivers than hardware, pushing traditional mobile phone vendors
to reinvent themselves to remain at the top of their game.” |