Apple's iPhone shipments are still getting squeezed in China by rising rivals

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in iPhone

Apple's fortunes in China may be getting worse in the short term, with iPhone shipments for the second quarter reportedly down year-on-year as local rivals increase competition.

Group of five people, wearing blue shirts, smile while taking a selfie with a smartphone.
Apple's Head of Retail, Deirdre O'Brien, in Apple Sanlitun, Beijing



Apple has slowly been changing its fortunes in China, with some observers seeing signs of a recovery in the region. However, not everything is going Apple's way in the contested market.

According to analysis from Canalys, Apple is seeing more competition in China, and its shipments are being hurt by it. In data shared with Reuters, Apple's smartphone shipments are claimed to have dropped 6.7% in the second quarter of 2024, versus Q2 2023.

Shipments for the quarter ending June had reached 9.7 million units. By contrast, the Q2 2023 figures had Apple shipments at 10.4 million.

Furthermore, Apple's market share in China also dropped, from 16% one year ago to 14%. This put Apple from third to sixth place in terms of smartphone shipments in China for the quarter, narrowly behind Xiaomi with 10 million shipments and a 14% share.

The drop in Apple's market share is only partly down to its reduced shipments. Overall, the China smartphone market saw a 10% year-on-year increase in shipments, with local rivals including Vivo, Oppo, Honor, and Huawei benefiting from increased sales.

The increased shipments and loss of market share has been seen elsewhere. One July 15 report pointed out that Apple's global market share for Q2 went from 16.6% in Q2 2023 to 15.8% in Q2 2024.

Meanwhile, Chinese firms saw similar rises globally. Xiaomi rose form 12.4% to 14.8%m while Vivo managed to go from 7.9% to 9.1%.

While Chinese vendors are benefiting from localized supply chains, Apple is apparently facing a bottleneck in mainland China. "The vendor's current channel strategy maintains a healthy inventory level and aims to stabilize retail prices and protect margins of channel partners," said Canalys analyst Lucas Zhong.

However, Apple does have the potential to bounce back in the coming year. Zhong adds that localizing Apple Intelligence services for China will be a crucial task to complete within the next 12 months.

And, some of this is seasonal. The second quarter is distant from Apple's fall releases.



Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 3
    AbcdEftAbcdEft Posts: 3member
    Their Greater China branch is even making a higher price tag at product launch in order to slow the third-party sellers' price drop. The starting price of the iPad Pro with M4 in mainland is about $120 higher than almost everywhere on this planet. Although the third-party price is still the same and dropping. Fierce competition is happening in China every day, high-end market especially. The record low price of iPhone 15 Pro is below $800/128 GB. Chinese users use their phones heavily, bad thermal design, A17 Pro's power issues, low-freq PWM screen flickering method and bad cellular connectivity is within their worries. Maybe that's all going to improve with the next-gen launch, but the lack of design change might just be the issue. The iPhone 13 Pro/Pro Max users there were laughing, still laughing now, and will laugh for couple years to come, for making the right iPhone choice ever. No ground-breaking updates since then, but worse thermal perf and battery life. Looking forward to iPhone 16/17 series, but due to the economy, can't say it would be better.
  • Reply 2 of 3
    zimmermannzimmermann Posts: 336member
    AbcdEft said:
    Their Greater China branch is even making a higher price tag at product launch in order to slow the third-party sellers' price drop. The starting price of the iPad Pro with M4 in mainland is about $120 higher than almost everywhere on this planet. Although the third-party price is still the same and dropping. Fierce competition is happening in China every day, high-end market especially. The record low price of iPhone 15 Pro is below $800/128 GB. Chinese users use their phones heavily, bad thermal design, A17 Pro's power issues, low-freq PWM screen flickering method and bad cellular connectivity is within their worries. Maybe that's all going to improve with the next-gen launch, but the lack of design change might just be the issue. The iPhone 13 Pro/Pro Max users there were laughing, still laughing now, and will laugh for couple years to come, for making the right iPhone choice ever. No ground-breaking updates since then, but worse thermal perf and battery life. Looking forward to iPhone 16/17 series, but due to the economy, can't say it would be better.
    I don’t know of any power issues, PWM flickering, and bad connectivity. Where is this information coming from?
  • Reply 3 of 3
    tmaytmay Posts: 6,452member
    AbcdEft said:
    Their Greater China branch is even making a higher price tag at product launch in order to slow the third-party sellers' price drop. The starting price of the iPad Pro with M4 in mainland is about $120 higher than almost everywhere on this planet. Although the third-party price is still the same and dropping. Fierce competition is happening in China every day, high-end market especially. The record low price of iPhone 15 Pro is below $800/128 GB. Chinese users use their phones heavily, bad thermal design, A17 Pro's power issues, low-freq PWM screen flickering method and bad cellular connectivity is within their worries. Maybe that's all going to improve with the next-gen launch, but the lack of design change might just be the issue. The iPhone 13 Pro/Pro Max users there were laughing, still laughing now, and will laugh for couple years to come, for making the right iPhone choice ever. No ground-breaking updates since then, but worse thermal perf and battery life. Looking forward to iPhone 16/17 series, but due to the economy, can't say it would be better.
    What a wonderfully useful third post in three years.../s
    blastdoor
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