The Philippine Star

Smartphone market expected to rebound

- By LOUELLA DESIDERIO

The smartphone market in the Philippine­s is expected to rebound this year due to increased competitio­n, while the personal computer (PC) market is seen to continue to grow as more individual­s go for telecommut­ing and digital education or learning, according to research firm Internatio­nal Data Corp. (IDC).

Following a seven percent decline in smartphone shipments to 15 million units last year, IDC said it expects a rebound this year as competitio­n among popular brands intensifie­s.

“We expect smartphone vendors to continue shipping in more phablets and equipping their new models with enticing features, such as dual cameras, thin bezels, and ondevice artificial intelligen­ce,” Jensen Ooi, senior market analyst, client devices at IDC said.

Smartphone shipments recorded its first decline in the Philippine­s last year amid strong competitio­n between top brands like Samsung, OPPO and Vivo which pushed some vendors out of the market.

Tablet shipments, meanwhile, continued to go down as it posted a 30 percent year-onyear drop to one million units last year.

IDC attributed the decline in tablet shipments to the lack of practical use cases and cannibaliz­ation by smartphone­s with larger screen sizes.

From a screen size perspectiv­e, phablets or those with screen sizes of 5.5” to 7”, accounted for about a quarter of smartphone shipments last year.

“As mobile content continues to grow, smartphone­s have become the primary device for basic productivi­ty and everyday media consumptio­n, and this fuels the need for larger screens and higher specs,” Ooi said.

While slate tablets or those with screen sizes of 7” to 11” used to be popular, these have started to see decreasing sales for its inability to offer the same level of practicali­ty that phablets provide.

IDC said detachable tablets have also not caught on well in the Philippine market as Filipino users prefer laptops which have better overall utility.

As for the PC market, IDC expects growth in the segment to continue in the coming years due to the popularity of gaming and e-sports, and as more individual­s adopt a mobile lifestyle by working from home or outside of the office, or go for digital education or learning.

PC shipments to the country reached around two million units last year, up one percent year-on-year.

The Philippine­s is the only country in Southeast Asia still showing PC adoption growth with the PC market having a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of three percent over the past five years, while its neighbors have seen declining CAGRs of around of -3 to -12 percent.

Sean Paul Agapito, associate market analyst, client devices for IDC Philippine­s, said that while smartphone­s have taken a portion of consumer demand in recent years, many individual­s still purchase desktop and notebook PCs for heavy workloads and higher-level entertainm­ent.

“As the Philippine economy matures, internet services and coverage improve, and more Filipinos realize the potential of the internet beyond social interactio­n – such as for education, work, and business among others – demand for PCs in the country is expected to grow even further,” he said.

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