Apple loses top spot in China as smartphone sales slump
CNN, CNNBUSINESS
By Laura He, CNN Business
Just three months ago, Apple became the top-selling smartphone brand in China for the first time in six years. Now it’s fallen back behind its Chinese rivals after suffering more than others from a first quarter slump in sales.
Two research reports published this week showed Apple slipping to third spot, behind Chinese Android handset brands.
The change in market rankings comes as China faces a sharp economic slowdown, and as Covid restrictions slam the brakes on consumer spending.
Smartphone sales in China declined 14% in the first quarter, as volumes fell “close to the levels seen during the severe pandemic-impacted Q1 2020,” Counterpoint Research said in a report on Thursday.
Apple’s sales plunged 23% in the three months to March, compared with the previous quarter, Counterpoint Research added. The company enjoyed rapid growth in China last year, right after releasing the iPhone 13.
Its market share in China now stands at 17.9%, compared with 21.7% in the quarter ended December.
A report by Canalys on Friday also showed Apple fell back from market leader in China to third spot, with its first quarter shipments down 36% from the previous quarter. Canalys tracks shipments by manufacturers to retail outlets, rather than sales to consumers.
Ivan Lam, senior analyst at Counterpoint Research, attributed Apple’s decline partly to the economic slowdown in China that has “affected money in people’s pockets.”
Chinese homegrown brands — including Vivo, Honor and Oppo̦ — fared better than Apple as their sales rebounded after suffering from the iPhone 13’s strong performance in the last quarter of 2021, Lam added.
Overall, a seasonal decline in demand and major economic uncertainty have dragged on the market in the first few months of this year.
“I don’t think Q2 data will improve much, as ongoing lockdowns will continue to affect consumers’ willingness to spend,” Lam told CNN Business.
There are full or partial lockdowns currently in place in at least 27 cities across China, affecting up to 165 million people, according to CNN’s calculations. Shanghai — the nation’s leading financial center and a major manufacturing hub — has been under lockdown for more than a month. The restrictions have forced many businesses to shut down and dealt a huge blow to economic activity.
China’s economy slowed sharply in the past couple of months. Retail sales contracted in March for the first time in more than a year. Unemployment, meanwhile, surged to a record 6% in 31 major cities.
“These factors, combined with the downward demand trend already visible in China’s smartphone market before the fresh pandemic wave, impacted the sector significantly,” Mengmeng Zhang, a research analyst for Counterpoint Research, said in the report accompanying the data release.
She expected China’s smartphone demand to remain “underwhelming” because of weak consumer sentiment and lack of new innovations to stimulate consumers.
It’s not just weak demand that’s hurting Apple in China. The company is also facing supply chain challenges stemming from China’s lockdowns. Foxconn, a major supplier for Apple, halted production at its Shenzhen factory for a few days last month as the city imposed a Covid lockdown. Pegatron, an iPhone assembler, also suspended operations in its Shanghai and Kunshan plants earlier this month.
CEO Tim Cook said Thursday during an earnings’ call that growing Covid restrictions in China, along with industry-wide silicon shortages, would impact the company’s next quarter by $4 billion to $8 billion.
“The supply chain issues continue to be a headwind in China and that will weigh on June quarter growth,” said Dan Ives, an analyst with Wedbush Securities.
Earlier this month, Canalys warned that smartphone vendors in the world face major uncertainty because of China’s rolling lockdowns, the Russia-Ukraine war, and the threat of inflation.
— Samantha Murphy Kelly contributed to this report.
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