Bangkok Post

IPhone faces worst slump since Covid

Overall smartphone sales rebound in Q1

- VLAD SAVOV

HONG KONG: Apple Inc’s iPhone shipments slid a worse-than-projected 10% in the quarter ending in March, reflecting flagging sales in China despite a broader smartphone industry rebound.

The company shipped 50.1 million iPhones in the first three months, according to market tracker IDC, falling shy of an average of analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg of 51.7 million units. The 9.6% year-on-year drop is the steepest for Apple since Covid lockdowns snarled supply chains in 2022, the researcher­s said.

The Cupertino, California-based iPhone maker has struggled to sustain sales in China since the debut of its latest generation in September. The resurgence of rivals from Huawei Technologi­es Co to Xiaomi Corp and a Beijing ban on foreign devices in the workplace have all weighed on sales. The IDC reckoning provides the first snapshot of the global performanc­e of Apple’s most important product ahead of earnings on May 2.

The drop in iPhone shipments is significan­t given the overall mobile market registered its best growth in years. Smartphone makers shipped 289.4 million handsets in the period, marking a 7.8% rise from the trough of a year ago, when many manufactur­ers were grappling with a surfeit of unsold devices. Samsung Electronic­s Co regained the top spot in the March quarter, while budget-focused Transsion increased shipments by 85% and

Xiaomi bounced back to close the gap on second-place Apple.

FEELING THE HEAT

“The smartphone market is emerging from the turbulence of the last two years both stronger and changed,” said Nabila Popal, research director at IDC. “While Apple has been super resilient and seen a lot of growth in shipments and share over the last few years, it will be a challenge for it to maintain the pace of growth and the peak share it saw in 2023. As the market recovers further in 2024, IDC expects Android to grow much faster than Apple.”

Prominent Apple suppliers Hon Hai Precision Industry Co, Murata Manufactur­ing Co and LG Innotek Co fell in Asia trading yesterday, amid a broader selloff on fears of escalating conflict in the Middle East.

During the pandemic, Apple’s iPhone showed the greatest resilience as consumers pulled back from purchases of smartphone­s by most of its Android-powered rivals.

That inventory buildup led to aggressive pricing by Chinese competitor­s like Xiaomi, which took months to deplete stocks and are now starting to ramp shipments back up. Huawei’s surprise return to prominence last year — with its own made-in-China chip and HarmonyOS operating system on the Mate 60 series — has been eroding Apple’s share of China’s premium market since August.

“Increased competitio­n in China is a big part of Apple’s decline in Q1,” Popal said. Elsewhere, a number of regions started the year with excess iPhone inventory after heavy shipments in the final months of 2023, she added.

Average selling prices for handsets are rising, as consumers increasing­ly opt for premium models that they intend to hold on to for longer, IDC’s researcher­s found. Apple, which consistent­ly maintains the highest ASP in the industry, has led the way in this, with consumers showing a distinct preference for its higher-tier models. Still, the company has this year resorted to unusual discounts to spur sales, with some retail partners in China taking as much as $180 off the regular price.

In March, Apple opened a large new store in the centre of financial hub Shanghai, with Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook in attendance. China is host to the company’s biggest retail network outside the US and accounts for roughly a fifth of sales, largely driven by the iPhone.

Many of the attendees who spoke to Bloomberg at the Shanghai event had acquired their iPhones more than two years ago. And while those Apple fans said they intended to remain within the company’s ecosystem, some said they would also consider Huawei’s Mate 60 successor or foldable device options from rivals.

 ?? IMAGES/AFP GETTY ?? An Apple store in Chicago. Apple has struggled to sustain sales in China, the world’s biggest smartphone market, since the debut of its latest iPhone in September.
IMAGES/AFP GETTY An Apple store in Chicago. Apple has struggled to sustain sales in China, the world’s biggest smartphone market, since the debut of its latest iPhone in September.

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