Samsung and RIM are stars of Q2 handset market
RIM overtakes Sony Ericsson to take number four position in rebounding market
Published: 30 July, 2010
READ MORE: Metrics | Research In Motion | Handset
RIM shareholders may worry about its market share prospects, but so far the BlackBerry maker is holding up well. With Samsung, it grew its share of the total handset market in the second quarter, while the rest of the top five fell back, according to the latest figures from Strategy Analytics.
RIM is the only smartphone specialist to figure in the overall cellphone top five, a position it took at the end of last year, largely at the expense of Motorola. In Q210, it did even better, overtaking Sony Ericsson by the smallest whisker to take fourth place behind the big three - Nokia, Samsung and LG. But it will be tough for either RIM or SEMC to maintain their current shares of around 3.6% each. The gap between the top three and the rest of the pack is widening, while several vendors lurk just below the fifth position, and some of these have aggressive growth plans for the second half of this year - Motorola itself, HTC, Apple, Huawei and ZTE.
In share terms, Nokia maintained its comfortable lead of 36.1%, but this was below its year-ago figure of 37.8% (and Nokia's own calculations put it lower than that, because the giant includes grey market and unauthorized handsets, unlike most analysts or rivals). Samsung grew its share from 19.1% a year earlier to 20.7% while LG was down slightly, from 10.9% to 10%. SEMC was down sharply from 5.1% to 3.6% while RIM was up from 2.9%.
These small but significant changes were driven by varying growth rates for the major players. Sony Ericsson was the only one to suffer year-on-year decline in unit shipment terms during the quarter, falling by 20% (on top of a 41% decline for full year 2009). The highest year-on-year growth was RIM's, at 40% in Q210, followed by Samsung on 22%. Nokia was more modest on 7.7%, but that reversed a 15% decline a year earlier, while LG grew just 2.7%, a disappointment after it managed 7.6% in the tougher Q2 a year before. The rising number of credible handset suppliers is indicated by the growth of shipments by 'others', which were up by 21%, whereas in Q209, these vendors had seen their sales drop by 8% as power was concentrated in the hands of the giants. Apple's market share rose from 2% to almost 3% in the quarter but its sales of 8.5m were dwarfed by Nokia's 111.1m, Samsung's 63.8m, LG's 30.6m, RIM's 11.2m and SEMC's 11m.
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