Apple passes RIM as fourth largest in mobile phone production

If you’re in a good mood today, or love RIM as much as we do, I would advise that you don’t read this article.  It pains me to say that, according to IDC, all BlackBerrys combined sold a total of 12.3 million devices in the last quarter, as compared to Apple’s 14.1 million.  While the Apple iPhone 4 is still pretty big, the hype around BlackBerry 6 and the Torch was hoped to more than make up for Apple’s recent release (and don’t forget the 10 odd BlackBerry models that released prior to BlackBerry 6, i.e. the Curve, Pearl, Bold, etc.). Full press notes below.

FRAMINGHAM, Mass., Oct 28, 2010 (BUSINESS WIRE) — The worldwide mobile phone market grew 14.6% in the third quarter of 2010 (3Q10), the fourth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth, driven in part by the fast-growing converged mobile device category. According to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, vendors shipped 340.5 million units in 3Q10 compared to 297.1 million units in the third quarter of 2009.

The growing popularity of converged mobile devices, or smartphones, with consumers and businesspersons is evidenced by the appearance of a second smartphone-only vendor in the top 5 ranking. Apple moved into the number 4 position worldwide in 3Q10, joining Research In Motion (RIM) as one of the world’s largest mobile phone suppliers. RIM has spent three quarters on IDC’s leaderboard. Apple and RIM also posted the highest-growth rates among the top 5 vendors last quarter.

“The entrance of Apple to the top 5 vendor ranking underscores the increased importance of smartphones to the overall market. Moreover, the mobile phone makers that are delivering popular smartphone models are among the fastest growing firms,” said Kevin Restivo, senior research analyst with IDC’s Worldwide Mobile Phone Tracker. “Vendors that aren’t developing a strong portfolio of smartphones will be challenged to maintain and grow market share in the future.”

Apple, RIM, and the vendors producing Android-based smartphones have put noticeable pressure on Nokia, the overall market leader. “Nokia still leads all vendors by a significant margin for converged mobile devices and mobile phones as a whole,” said Ramon Llamas, senior research analyst with IDC’s Mobile Devices Technology and Trends team. “However, Nokia’s grip on the traditional mobile phone market has been somewhat loosened, as multiple Chinese vendors have gained ground, especially within emerging markets. To bolster its overall competitiveness, Nokia has been focused on improving its smartphone offerings.”

Market Outlook

IDC believes the worldwide mobile phone market will be driven largely by smartphone growth to the end of 2014. “The smartphone is becoming the focal point of the personal communications experience,” noted Restivo. “As a result, new market growth will be increasingly generated by smartphones. This year, we are expecting the smartphone sub-market to grow 55% year over year.”

Regional Analysis

Competitive forces emerged in the Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan) region last quarter to the detriment of market leader Nokia. In emerging markets, brands such as Micromax, Nexian, and i-Mobile chipped away at Nokia’s market share. Android-powered smartphones also gained momentum across the region at the expense of Nokia. Samsung gained ground in South Korea while Huawei, Lenovo, and ZTE launched devices in several markets. In Japan, mobile phone market growth was driven primarily by domestic vendors Sharp, Panasonic, Fujitsu, and NEC. The Western European mobile phone market’s growth was largely attributable to smartphones, which grew thanks to the iPhone 4 and Android-powered devices from HTC and Samsung. Demand was also stoked by large operator device subsidies that helped to keep consumer interest in smartphones high. At the same time, the CEMA handset market grew slowly in 3Q10. As a result, smartphone volumes are growing substantially but still only comprise one-fifth of total shipments for the regions combined. This is modest compared to more economically-developed regions. The United States mobile phone market was characterized by growth in the smartphone market. Grabbing headlines were the Apple iPhone 4, RIM’s BlackBerry Torch 9800, the HTC EVO 4G, and Motorola’s new DROID X and DROID 2, all of which were launched last quarter. Not to be overlooked was Samsung’s Galaxy S smartphone lineup, which were launched at all of the major carriers last quarter. Traditional mobile phones, meanwhile, fought back with smartphone-like functionality, but saw their overall share of the market continue to decline. In Canada, Android-powered handsets gained momentum as Samsung, LG, Sony Ericsson and Motorola shipped new models. Huawei and ASUS, low-cost providers of Android devices, entered the market. RIM’s BlackBerry Torch was announced while the iPhone 4 was introduced to great fanfare. Despite continued economic sluggishness in some countries, the Latin American region grew as a result of higher smartphone adoption. Vendors like Alcatel, ZTE, and Huawei have targeted Latin America aggressively with entry-level models in an effort to steal share from Nokia, the overall market leader in the region. These models are lower-cost product offerings designed to meet the needs of basic users. Motorola’s Android-powered devices have also grown quickly in the region due to the popularity of models like the QUENCH, Backflip, and Milestone.

Top Five Mobile Phone Vendors

Nokia maintained the top spot in the overall mobile phone market despite year-over-year unit shipment growth of less than 2% in new chief executive Steven Elop’s first quarter at the helm. The company grew converged mobile device shipments 61% in 3Q10, but average selling prices for the device type dropped to EUR136, compared to EUR190 in the same quarter last year. Nokia attributed the plunge to price pressure from competitors and its stated desire to reach more customers. Nokia hopes the C8 and C7 devices will boost ASPs in future.

Samsung marked a new milestone during the third quarter, pushing through the 70 million unit mark for the first time in the company’s history. In addition, the company more than doubled the number of converged mobile device shipments from the previous quarter. Driving this was the worldwide release of its Galaxy S i9000 converged mobile device, as well as its bada-based Wave model. Looking ahead to the fourth quarter, Samsung appears poised to bring more smartphones to market, with a new Wave 2 awaiting launch and more mass-market devices for emerging markets.

LG Electronics missed its 3Q10 total mobile phone and smartphone shipment growth targets, resulting in an overall double-digit shipment decrease when compared to the same quarter one year ago. LG has yet to make a significant impact in the smartphone category unlike its competitors. Although operating margin returned to the same levels as a year ago, sales and profitability both fell significantly. By the end of the quarter, LG replaced its CEO Nam Yong with Koo Bon-Joon, head of LG’s trading firm, LG International.

Apple leapt ahead of several vendors in 3Q10 including RIM, which it surpassed by 1.7-million units, and Sony Ericsson by 3.7-million units. The company’s record shipment performance can be attributed to the introduction of the iPhone 4 in 17 new countries last quarter. The record performance came despite “Antennagate,” the name used to describe the controversy around alleged iPhone reception problems, in July.

Research In Motion posted a record number of unit shipments in 3Q10. The BlackBerry maker continues to grow in Latin America, for example, due to the success of the Curve 8520 entry-level model, which has helped drive growth in most emerging markets. The vendor’s results were also boosted by the introduction of the higher-cost Torch in the United States, a key market due to the size and intensity of competition.

SonyEricsson, which shipped 10.4 million units in 3Q10, fell off the Top 5 list for the first time since the Tracker was conceived in 2004.

[CHART]

Source: IDC Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, October 28, 2010

Note: Vendor shipments are branded shipments and exclude OEM sales for all vendors.

via: Boy Genius Report

RIM sees a brighter day with Q2 results

RIM has faced many challenges  lately and has been everything short of critically acclaimed. However today they reported their earning for the second quarter and there is one word that can describe them: HOPEFUL! They did not exceed the competition in any shape or fashion but they did prove to still be a contender with much potential. The company raked in 796.7 million in this years second quarter, almost doubling that of last years (475.6 million). They shipped 12.1 million devices compared to a projected 11.8 by analysts. This alone proves one very important fact: The recent release of the BlackBerry Torch is not what kept RIM in the game being that it had a release very late in the quarter. Many people based the future of the company on the success of their first BlackBerry 6 device, but the fact remains that they remain very much relevant with the line of handsets they already had available

The Q2 results should send one message to RIM that has been stated even before hand, and that is they don’t have much time to get it together. The number of new subscriptions was only 4.5 million (down from 4.9 the previous year and 5.2 the year before that).  Most likely this means that RIM still has a few loyal customers left who either upgraded their devices, or some new consumers who fell victim to the hype around the Torch and started a new contract. With all of this being said, it still boils down to the same old story. RIM needs major improvement in three areas: Hardware, Software, and Apps, which basically means their entire handset needs reconstruction from the ground up, no more new frosting on old cake. If they expect to be more than a contender in the future then new innovations are a must. I’d hate to see an amazing company like RIM go under or even be considered “mediocre” in today’s market.

Are you surprised by RIMs sales in Q2? Did you think they would’ve done better? Worse? And what new innovations are you looking forward to seeing from the company in the future that will improve their standings in the mobile market?

via: WSJ

Google’s Android knocks RIM off of their US marketshare throne

second-place-award

At one point, RIM’s mighty US market share reign seemed unstoppable, that is, until the public was introduced to what is Android. With the iPhone only being offered on one carrier stunted their growth and really didn’t pose a huge threat to RIM. Then late November ’09 the world was introduced to Android. By that time, T-Mobile had been sporting the dangerous Android for quite some time, but it laked the proper marketing. In November ’09 Verizon got their hands on the Motorola Droid and fueled millions into marketing for their Droid line of phones which were direct straight at Apple’s iPhone. Once Android got the proper attention, RIM’s reign was given an expiration date. Nobody at that time really understood how popular Android was or was going to be, but many of us saw this coming. RIM, being the conservative company that they are, has been very painfully slow to change and keep up with this new rush of media-centric devices that are extremely user friendly.

With user satisfaction one a rapid decline, RIM has to do something to fix their own problem. I don’t expect another BlackBerry rush with the release of BlackBerry 6, but see it as a placeholder while they reinvent (at least I hope they reinvent). A lot of people have lost their trust in RIM and it will take more than a few changes here and there with a new UI to win people back over. Us BlackBerry fiends are excited and have yet to jump ship, but many of us have had a sweet taste of Android. I love both Android and BlackBerry, but BlackBerry is my workhorse. I’ve been using them for a long time now, and it’s going to take more than a fun toy like Android to make me jump ship.

In the US, Android is now holding a whopping 34 percent marketshare with RIM in a close second at 32 percent. Apple is still trailing in third at 21.7 percent. All three manufacturers experienced growth. Apple saw a 61 percent year-over-year growth, RIM saw 41 percent, and Android saw an amazing 886 percent year-over-year growth. The reporting was done by Canalys and to see the full press release, visit the source link. RIM has a lot to learn, and hopefully this is a huge eyeopener for them.

via: Engadget