Nokia, Samsung lose handset market share

Liam Tung
03 Aug 2010
00:00

Nokia and Samsung - the world’s top two handset makers - both lost market share in Q2, under pressure from OEMs as well as high-end smartphones, according to IDC.

Vendors including Apple and ZTE were the biggest winners in the quarter as four of the top five vendors lost market share, the research firm said.

Nokia remains on top of the handset league table, but the 111.1 million devices it shipped captured just 35% of the global market, down 1.6 percentage points from Q1 and 2.2 points from a year ago, IDC said.

Rival Samsung’s share fell from 21.8% in Q1 to 20.1%, while both RIM and Sony Ericsson slid from 3.6% to 3.5%. Only LG increased its share, up less than half a point to 9.6%.

IDC reported that shipments of all mobile devices had risen 14.5% for the year, but this was mostly driven by companies outside the top five, which increased their portion from 25.3% to 28.3%.

“Lower smartphone average selling prices, increased consumer interest, and aggressive expansion plans on the part of key suppliers will keep the device type growing above market growth rate,” he said.

MORE ARTICLES ON APPLE, LG, MARKET SHARE, NOKIA, RIM, SAMSUNG, SMARTPHONES, SONY ERICSSON, ZTE

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