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> TECHNOLOGY > COMMUNICATIONS
Smartphone
shipments to reach 1.7 billion in 2017
ConvergenceAsia staff
14/05/2012
Smartphones will
outperform the overall market for mobile phones, growing at a compound
annual growth rate (CAGR) of 24.9 per cent for the period 2011–17 to reach
1.7 billion units, according to Ovum. Predictions show Android as the
dominant operating system over the next five years as handset vendors rush
to make it their primary smartphone platform.
In its latest forecast, the leading telecoms analyst house reveals global
annual mobile phone shipments will grow at a CAGR of 6.3 per cent between
2011 and 2017, driven primarily by demand from emerging markets where
connection growth will continue to fuel handset shipments. Asia-Pacific will
be the largest region in volume terms, shipping just over 200 million units
by 2016. New shipments in developed markets, such as North America and
Western Europe, will be almost entirely made up of smartphones, while
feature phones will continue to play a small role in emerging markets in
2017.
“Android will dominate the smartphone market over the next five years,” said
Adam Leach, principal analyst at Ovum. “While Apple has defined the
smartphone market since it introduced the iPhone in 2007, we’re now seeing a
sharp rise in the shipment volumes of Android, signaling its appeal to
leading handset manufacturers.”
Smartphones based on Android accounted for 44 per cent of the smartphone
market in 2011, significantly up from 17 per cent in 2010. However, its
share will reach 48 per cent in 2017, as Android-based smartphones are
expected to grow at a CAGR of 26.8 per cent over the forecast period.
Apple's iOS will be the second most widely deployed software platform in
2017, accounting for 27 per cent of the smartphone market, a slight increase
on the 23 per cent share of the market it reported in 2011. Sitting some way
behind the Android/iOS duopoly will be the remaining smartphone players.
“Although it will remain behind Android in terms of shipment volumes, Apple
will continue to be a key player and innovator in the smartphone market over
the forecast period,” says Leach. “We expect Microsoft, despite its slow
start, to have established Windows Phone as a relevant smartphone platform
by 2017.”
The Windows Phone platform, with the assistance of Nokia, will account for
13 per cent of the smartphone market in 2017. Despite losing significant
market share since its high point in 2009, RIM's BlackBerry platform will
still represent 10 per cent of the market in 2017.
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