Waikato Times

Are smartphone­s too expensive?

Apple may have hit the price point we’re not prepared to pay, writes David Court.

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Anyone who has researched buying a new phone in the past year will have noticed one thing: Smartphone­s are getting really expensive. And new data released by PriceSpy suggests that Kiwis aren’t prepared to keep paying top dollar for their new devices. Not even iPhones.

The price of phones going up isn’t exactly news. We, the consumers, are demanding more and more features from our smartphone­s. And manufactur­ers are duly delivering this.

Face recognitio­n, in-screen fingerprin­t sensors, continuous­ly better cameras, edge-to-edge HD displays. All these innovation­s have seen the price of high-end smartphone­s explode well over the $2000 mark.

And the recent $2799 price tag for the iPhone Max XS 512GB suggests that it’s not about to slow down any time soon.

An intriguing trend that PriceSpy’s data below highlights is that there’s a limit to how much we’re prepared to pay for our smartphone­s. And, for most of us, $2000 is the line we’re not willing to cross.

Looking at PriceSpy’s search data for the top 10 most popular phones, Apple is only noticeable by its relatively poor performanc­e.

Top 10 most popular phones February 2019 (PriceSpy.co.nz)

■ Huawei Nova 3i 128GB

■ Samsung Galaxy S9 64GB

■ Samsung Galaxy S8 64GB

■ Samsung Galaxy S7 32GB

■ Samsung Galaxy Note 9 128GB

■ *Samsung Galaxy S9 Plus 64GB

■ Apple iPhone X 64GB

■ OnePlus 6 128GB

■ Apple iPhone XR 64GB

■ OnePlus 6T 128GB

*Most expensive phone in top 10 ($1699)

The interestin­g thing about this chart is the lack of showing from Apple’s newest flagships, the iPhone XS and XS Max. In its place are sub-$2000 rivals from Huawei, Samsung, and OnePlus.

Amazingly, Apple’s lesser iPhones, the ‘‘affordable’’ iPhone XR and 2018’s iPhone X, outrank the new flagships.

Why isn’t the iPhone XS in the top 10? It could be argued that a lot of this is to be expected.

Apple launches its smartphone­s every September, while Samsung’s biggest phone launch is in February. That suggests the poor performanc­e is a result of Apple’s phones being out of date compared with some of its rivals on this list.

This would be inaccurate, though. The following table shows the most popular phone searches recorded by PriceSpy for October last year – when the iPhone XS went on sale.

The common theme? There’s no iPhone XS.

Top 10 most popular phones October 2018 (PriceSpy.co.nz)

■ Huawei Nova 3i 128GB

■ Samsung Galaxy S8 64GB

■ Samsung Galaxy S9 64GB

■ Samsung Galaxy Note 9 128GB

■ Samsung Galaxy S7 32GB

■ Apple iPhone X 64GB

■ Samsung Galaxy S9 Plus 64GB

■ OnePlus 6 64GB

■ Huawei P20 Pro 128GB

■ Apple iPhone 8 64GB

When a new iPhone doesn’t make the list of the top 10 most popular phones, something has gone seriously wrong.

So what’s going on? A logical argument is that new flagship iPhones are too expensive. Kiwis aren’t prepared to pay $2799 for the top-spec iPhone. Fair enough.

PriceSpy search data reflects this, but it’s a little confusing, so bear with me. PriceSpy calculates a phone’s popularity based on the number of clicks a product receives. From its current data pool, 108,000 is the least popular product, and 1 is most popular.

Interestin­gly, the iPhone XS Max 512GB, Apple’s most expensive and feature-rich phone, only ranked at number 830 in this chart when it first went on sale in October 2018. A pretty shocking statistic for the world’s most popular smartphone manufactur­er.

Back then, the iPhone XS Max 512GB had a hefty RRP of $2799. The price of this phone has dropped 17 per cent (-$400) since then, and, predictabl­y, its rank improved by 300 places in PriceSky’s popularity chart as a result.

It’s crucial not to misinterpr­et this data. PriceSpy also published data (see below) that shows people are still searching for Apple devices. A lot.

Most popular phone brands for 2019 to date (PriceSpy.co.nz)

■ Samsung – 38.9 per cent

■ Apple – 20.4 per cent

■ Huawei – 15.7 per cent

■ OnePlus – 5.7 per cent

■ Xiaomi – 4.6 per cent

The difference is that the price of the new iPhones is putting consumers off clicking through to retailer pages. Instead, they are opting for better value devices – a trend that isn’t new. Samsung, Huawei, Xiaomi and others manufactur­e mid-range phones, with mid-range specs, for this reason.

A more worrying trend for Apple is that customers are now more willing to buy its own yearold devices rather than pay the RRP for a new iPhone.

Should Apple be concerned? Probably not. The company just posted quarterly profits of US$51.98 billion (NZ$75.1 billion) from the sales of iPhones alone.

A more measured response is to expect Apple to continue to release more affordable smartphone­s like the iPhone XR.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Apple’s attempts to target the high-end market may see it lose out to cheaper offers from rivals such as Samsung.
GETTY IMAGES Apple’s attempts to target the high-end market may see it lose out to cheaper offers from rivals such as Samsung.

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