Gulf News

Global tech spending to slip by 1% as lower prices offset sales

Spending on smartphone­s, tablets expected to account for some 43 cents of every dollar spent

-

The Consumer Electronic­s Associatio­n estimates that global spending on technology will slip 1 per cent this year to $ 1.06 trillion ( Dh3.89 trillion) as the lower average selling price of smartphone­s and tablets offsets unit growth in markets such as China.

The decline is off the peak of $ 1.07 trillion estimated this year.

Steve Koenig, the associatio­n’s director of industry analysis, issued the forecast at the opening of the annual Internatio­nal CES gadget show on Sunday.

The retreat doesn’t reflect less consumer appetite for what Koenig called the “dynamic duo” of tech gadgets. Spending on smartphone­s and tablets is still expected to account for some 43 cents of every dollar spent on technology this year.

But the average price of smartphone­s, for example, will fall from $ 444 in 2010 to an estimated $ 297 this year, despite the number of smartphone­s sold rising to 1.21 billion up from 1.01 billion.

Lower- end devices

“These lower- end devices are what’s required to penetrate most deeply into these emerging markets,” he said.

Smartphone­s and tablets remain such key drivers of technology spending that they are eating into other categories of devices like point- and- shoot cameras, video cameras, portable GPS devices and hand- held gaming devices.

However, within other categories of devices there are a few pockets of growth, including wearable devices.

Smartwatch sales are expected to be 1.5 million units globally this year, up from 1 million in 2013, said Shawn DuBravac, the associatio­n’s chief economist.

“This is a very nascent market. We’re still looking for that killer applicatio­n for that particular device,” he said.

Ultra HD television­s, which roughly quadruple the number of pixels of a high- definition set, are also seen taking off.

There were 60,000 such sets sold in the US alone last year, a number expected to hit 485,000 this year, the associatio­n said. However, that’s still a small number compared to the nearly 40 million TVs sold in the US each year, DuBravac said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates