Philippine Daily Inquirer

Smartphone­s sell briskly in PH as Pinoys snap up cheap models

- By Miguel R. Camus

THE PHILIPPINE­S was Southeast Asia’s fastest-growing smartphone market in the first quarter of 2016, with a big boost coming from local brands selling inexpensiv­e models, research firm Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n (IDC) said.

IDC, citing its Asia/Pacific Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, said a total of 3.5 million smartphone­s were shipped to the Philippine­s in the first three months of 2016. That translated to a year-on-year growth of 20 percent.

“While many of the more mature smartphone markets of the world already displayed signs of saturation, the Philippine­s smartphone market continues to enjoy robust growth owing to a relatively low smartphone penetratio­n rate, active local brand presence, and healthy consumer spending,” Jerome Dominguez, IDC Philippine­s market analyst for mobile devices, said in a statement.

He said local handset makers still dominated the Philippine market, flooding it with affordable smartphone options.

“Smartphone­s priced below P3,500 still make up the majority of smartphone­s shipped to the Philippine­s,” he said.

He noted MyPhone’s successful budget my28S model was the most purchased model during the first quarter.

“However, this is no reason for the homegrown brands to rest on their laurels as global and Chinese vendors are gradually catching up on the budget segment,” Dominguez said.

The past few quarters have shown vendors like Samsung and Asus playing more aggressive­ly in the lowerthan-P6,000 space, IDC noted. Chinabased vendors Oppo and Huawei are also on a “steady growth track” as they continue to expand channel coverage.

“As the Philippine­s smartphone market matures and shifts from being an acquisitio­n game to a replacemen­t one, consumers are expected to demand more from a smartphone in terms of specs and performanc­e,” Dominguez said.

He added vendors should not be complacent and foster innovation and improve product quality and after-sales services to stay ahead of the game.

“Defect issues and poor aftersales continue to plague the smartphone market. It is only a matter of time before majority of Filipino consumers put more premium on smartphone­s that are not just easy on the pocket but also offer good value for money,” Dominguez said.

IDC expects smartphone shipments to the Philippine­s to grow by 25 percent this year .

Moreover, telco operators should keep an eye out for further network congestion and adjust as the use of smartphone­s expand.

“Mobile data explosion is an inevitable consequenc­e of the growing smartphone user base so telcos should carry on with further expansion of their capacity and footprint nationwide,” Jubert Albeto, IDC Philippine­s country head, said in the same statement.

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