Data suggests China's smartphone decline worse than expected, Apple's iPhone pushed out of...

Posted:
in iPhone edited April 2018
The Chinese smartphone market was actually hit harder in the March quarter than a recent report suggested, dropping 21 percent year-over-year to 91 million units, according to a separate analysis.

Using animoji on a Chinese iPhone X.
Using animoji on a Chinese iPhone X.


Eight of the top 10 vendors saw their shipments fall year-over-year, with companies like Samsung and Meizu narrowing to less than half of Q1 2017 figures, wrote research firm Canalys. One of the exceptions was Xiaomi, which is said to have grown shipments 37 percent to 12 million, supplanting Apple in fourth place.

Canalys didn't immediately provide Apple's numbers, but noted that the top four brands -- Huawei, Oppo, Vivo, and Xiaomi -- represented over 73 percent of shipments.

"The level of competition has forced every vendor to imitate the others' product portfolios and go-to-market strategies," analyst Mo Jia added. "But the costs of marketing and channel management in a country as big as China are huge, and only vendors that have reached a certain size can cope. While Huawei, Oppo, Vivo and Xiaomi must contend with a shrinking Chinese market, they can take comfort from the fact that it will continue to consolidate, and that their size will help them last longer than other smaller players."

The Canalys data would appear to conflict with a report by Counterpoint Research, which not only suggested an 8 percent industry decline but that Apple held on to fourth place, with its shipments rising 32 percent. Much of this was attributed to the iPhone X, which despite being prohibitively expensive for most Chinese drew attention from the people that could afford it.

Earlier in April, UBS analyst Steven Milunovich suggested that Apple was "fairly saturated" in the country, and predicted relatively flat sales with small long-term growth.

A more conclusive picture should emerge when Apple formally announces its March-quarter results on May 1. Apple normally avoids publicizing iPhone sales data until its quarterly announcements, leaving researchers to gauge the product's performance by other means.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 18
    nunzynunzy Posts: 662member
    China is a big country. But you need a certain average income to afford Apple products.

    Some Chinese people can afford Apple, but not all.
  • Reply 2 of 18
    irelandireland Posts: 17,798member
    Are you telling me China aren't putting the most expensive phone in number one place? I'm surprised Apple is in forth place in China.
    anton zuykov
  • Reply 3 of 18
    asdasdasdasd Posts: 5,686member
    nunzy said:
    China is a big country. But you need a certain average income to afford Apple products.

    Some Chinese people can afford Apple, but not all.
    About 200-300M of them are as rich as westerners. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 18

    If you read the report from Counterpoint Research which lists the percentages by brand you will see that the top 5 smartphones hold 73% of all sales.  It looks like Canalys specifically left out the Apple figure and added it to their group of four.  The total can’t be exactly the same for the top 4 in one report and the top five in the other.  There is obviously an unintentional or intentional error.  Why would Apple not be mentioned? Perhaps someone is trying to effect the stock before the results are announced next week.

    SpamSandwichSpamSandwichaxcoatlwatto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 18
    FolioFolio Posts: 698member
    Yes, China booming middle class. Purchases of bmw Audi etc help make VW largest carmaker. I’m no expert. Curious if iOS differentiates a device as much in China as in US. Never viewed app offerings in China. Anyone know if Apple still adding stores? Hitting many second tier cities?
  • Reply 6 of 18
    Folio said:
    Yes, China booming middle class. Purchases of bmw Audi etc help make VW largest carmaker. I’m no expert. Curious if iOS differentiates a device as much in China as in US. Never viewed app offerings in China. Anyone know if Apple still adding stores? Hitting many second tier cities?
    this is Apple's biggest risk - in China, a lot of app functionality is consumed as a sub-app within a larger app (in particular, tencent's WeChat app). This means that payments, car sharing, shopping, browsing, chat, etc., are sub-apps within WeChat. And this also means that iOS is less sticky - someone entirely contained in the WeChat ecosystem can change phones with very small switching costs as their whole app world just moves with them. It doesn't completely undercut iOS and, obviously, hardware differences matter. But it is a real risk. As an aside, I think this is why Facebook tried so hard to make Facebook a platform so that its app would be the world inside which users live.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 7 of 18
    clarker99clarker99 Posts: 230member
    Must be earnings season!

    AAPL down ~$15 over last 5 or 6 sessions with all these ‘analysts’ guessing on weak sales of the X. Apparently Apple only sells 1 model in the analyst world.

    Guessing yr over yr revenue and profit will be up over last year. The q3 guidance will come in below the street expectations. Stock will drop. Will hit $155 or so then magically rise into the high $170’s or low $180’s till the next earning call where doom and gloom will re-appear. Rinse, repeat. 
    SpamSandwichwatto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 18
    jungmarkjungmark Posts: 6,926member
    Competing stats! The numbers maybe the similar but it's how they interpret/manipulate  them. 
    SpamSandwichwatto_cobra
  • Reply 9 of 18
    512ke512ke Posts: 782member
    I used to get frustrated by this kind of doom and gloom news about Apple, until I realized it was sometimes just overt manipulation, at which point, I started making money off of it by recognizing the cycle. I don't "buy on rumors" but rather I "buy on doom and gloom".
  • Reply 10 of 18
    nunzy said:
    China is a big country. But you need a certain average income to afford Apple products.

    Some Chinese people can afford Apple, but not all.
    I'm not interested in what the "average" Chinese can afford.  I'm interested in iPhone's market share among those that can afford it.

    In a country of about 1.2 Billion, I suspect the percentage of China's population that can afford an iPhone (starting price USD399) is ~15%.  That means an addressable market of ~180,000,000 (about 2X the US addressable market), with 9% able to afford the latest model (addressable market ~100,000,000).  So what's iPhone share in these segments?

    When discussing iPhone share, analysts and the media neglect to point out that Apple doesn't make, nor is it interested in the commodity (under USD400) market.  And as the article pointed out, only the largest (translation: most profitable) will survive in a saturated market.  By most profitable, I'm referring to more than handsets.  I'm referring to other products Chinese handset buyers are likely to buy from the same manufacturer.  Currently, none of the top Chinese handset makers have a viable ecosystem to lock customers into, certainly, they don't have the hardware/services ecosystem that Apple does.
    tmayaxcoatl
  • Reply 11 of 18
    tzeshantzeshan Posts: 2,351member
    asdasd said:
    nunzy said:
    China is a big country. But you need a certain average income to afford Apple products.

    Some Chinese people can afford Apple, but not all.
    About 200-300M of them are as rich as westerners. 
    iPhone X is sold 20% to 30% higher than in US. If iPhone X is sold at such price will it sell as many in US as now? Probably only some of the people will buy an iPhone if it is made in US. 
  • Reply 12 of 18
    clarker99 said:
    AAPL down ~$15 over last 5 or 6 sessions with all these ‘analysts’ guessing on weak sales of the X. Apparently Apple only sells 1 model in the analyst world.

    Guessing yr over yr revenue and profit will be up over last year. The q3 guidance will come in below the street expectations. 

    Your first statement regarding 'analysts' guessing is spot on.  I have been tracking analyst (41) unit sales, revenue and EPS estimates for more than 10 years.  The spread between high and low estimates is big enough to drive a very large truck through (without scraping paint).  The percentage of analysts that consistently comes close is 10%.

    Apple guided revenue (bottom of range) at $60 Billion.  Since FQ3/2012 (when Oppenheimer replaced Anderson as CFO), Apple has never failed to achieve its bottom of revenue range.  That's never in 23 quarters (almost 6 years).  Apple's average revenue beat (bottom of the range) during the aforementioned period is 5.76%.  Running Apple's guidance numbers results in YoY Net Income growth of 19%.

    I don't know about this august group, but I'm inclined to believe the people most likely to KNOW, then a bunch that is guessing.


    SpamSandwich
  • Reply 13 of 18
    Folio said:
    Yes, China booming middle class. Purchases of bmw Audi etc help make VW largest carmaker. I’m no expert. Curious if iOS differentiates a device as much in China as in US. Never viewed app offerings in China. Anyone know if Apple still adding stores? Hitting many second tier cities?
    this is Apple's biggest risk - in China, a lot of app functionality is consumed as a sub-app within a larger app (in particular, tencent's WeChat app). This means that payments, car sharing, shopping, browsing, chat, etc., are sub-apps within WeChat. And this also means that iOS is less sticky - someone entirely contained in the WeChat ecosystem can change phones with very small switching costs as their whole app world just moves with them. It doesn't completely undercut iOS and, obviously, hardware differences matter. But it is a real risk. As an aside, I think this is why Facebook tried so hard to make Facebook a platform so that its app would be the world inside which users live.
    I agree WeChat is iPhone's biggest sales limiter.  However, WeChat is OS agnostic, and the Chinese are incredibly status conscious.  The iPhone is an aspirational status symbol in China.  That's why I'm interested in iPhone market share among the top 15% of the addressable market.  THIS IS APPLE'S TARGET MARKET.
    SpamSandwichaxcoatl
  • Reply 14 of 18
    foggyhillfoggyhill Posts: 4,767member
    everytime we have "data suggests", you know it's pure crap.

    Data suggests nothing, either it demonstrates it, or it does not....

    I'm guessing the "Data" itself is crap, so it's a multi-layered logically fallacy.

    The logical lightweights who produce those things must think we are idiots.
    edited April 2018
  • Reply 15 of 18
    vision33rvision33r Posts: 213member
    Iphone X is too small for China, they like big phones.  The iPhone X is a tad bigger than iPhone 8 and shorter than the Plus.  It needs to be as big and tall as the 8 Plus.

    BTW, a lot of Chinese while rich aren't as sophisticated as Americans.  They like headphone jack so Apple hasn't done well lately because they are putting out less features in a pricier package.  Most Chinese don't care about 3D touch or FaceID, they like simple PIN code.  I rarely see a wealthy Chinese unlock via touchID, they like simplicity.  FaceID was supposed to be that solution but it doesn't always work.  There's nothing as simple as PIN code unlock, since touch ID and face ID both have higher failure rates than just entering a code.
    edited April 2018
  • Reply 16 of 18
    asdasdasdasd Posts: 5,686member
    clarker99 said:
    AAPL down ~$15 over last 5 or 6 sessions with all these ‘analysts’ guessing on weak sales of the X. Apparently Apple only sells 1 model in the analyst world.

    Guessing yr over yr revenue and profit will be up over last year. The q3 guidance will come in below the street expectations. 

    Your first statement regarding 'analysts' guessing is spot on.  I have been tracking analyst (41) unit sales, revenue and EPS estimates for more than 10 years.  The spread between high and low estimates is big enough to drive a very large truck through (without scraping paint).  The percentage of analysts that consistently comes close is 10%.

    Apple guided revenue (bottom of range) at $60 Billion.  Since FQ3/2012 (when Oppenheimer replaced Anderson as CFO), Apple has never failed to achieve its bottom of revenue range.  That's never in 23 quarters (almost 6 years).  Apple's average revenue beat (bottom of the range) during the aforementioned period is 5.76%.  Running Apple's guidance numbers results in YoY Net Income growth of 19%.

    I don't know about this august group, but I'm inclined to believe the people most likely to KNOW, then a bunch that is guessing.


    Great point. In fact they warn if they don’t meet low end guidance. 
  • Reply 17 of 18
    avon b7avon b7 Posts: 7,668member
    asdasd said:
    clarker99 said:
    AAPL down ~$15 over last 5 or 6 sessions with all these ‘analysts’ guessing on weak sales of the X. Apparently Apple only sells 1 model in the analyst world.

    Guessing yr over yr revenue and profit will be up over last year. The q3 guidance will come in below the street expectations. 

    Your first statement regarding 'analysts' guessing is spot on.  I have been tracking analyst (41) unit sales, revenue and EPS estimates for more than 10 years.  The spread between high and low estimates is big enough to drive a very large truck through (without scraping paint).  The percentage of analysts that consistently comes close is 10%.

    Apple guided revenue (bottom of range) at $60 Billion.  Since FQ3/2012 (when Oppenheimer replaced Anderson as CFO), Apple has never failed to achieve its bottom of revenue range.  That's never in 23 quarters (almost 6 years).  Apple's average revenue beat (bottom of the range) during the aforementioned period is 5.76%.  Running Apple's guidance numbers results in YoY Net Income growth of 19%.

    I don't know about this august group, but I'm inclined to believe the people most likely to KNOW, then a bunch that is guessing.


    Great point. In fact they warn if they don’t meet low end guidance. 
    Yes, it is a good point and many companies have warned before reporting and I'm sure that Apple would do so if numbers were far off the guidance they gave. However, I've always wondered if it was actually a requirement.

    I don't expect a blowout quarter for Monday (it wouldn't make sense) but even the slightest dip will send the share price tumbling. As a non shareholder, I can relax though.
  • Reply 18 of 18
    LatkoLatko Posts: 398member
    nunzy said:
    China is a big country. But you need a certain average income to afford Apple products.

    Some Chinese people can afford Apple, but not all.
    I'm not interested in what the "average" Chinese can afford.  I'm interested in iPhone's market share among those that can afford it.

    In a country of about 1.2 Billion, I suspect the percentage of China's population that can afford an iPhone (starting price USD399) is ~15%.  That means an addressable market of ~180,000,000 (about 2X the US addressable market), with 9% able to afford the latest model (addressable market ~100,000,000).  So what's iPhone share in these segments?

    When discussing iPhone share, analysts and the media neglect to point out that Apple doesn't make, nor is it interested in the commodity (under USD400) market.  And as the article pointed out, only the largest (translation: most profitable) will survive in a saturated market.  By most profitable, I'm referring to more than handsets.  I'm referring to other products Chinese handset buyers are likely to buy from the same manufacturer.  Currently, none of the top Chinese handset makers have a viable ecosystem to lock customers into, certainly, they don't have the hardware/services ecosystem that Apple does.
    The issue is that in China, there is not that “blind follower” culture that pays whatever the Cookette Board asks. For a premium device like the iPhone X, there is a wait and see attitude. Xiaomi understands that and mimics Apple just enough to lure in customers - at a far better price point. Apple lost its premium brand image. It is not cool to be seen with an (real) iPhone X as it means you have screwed yourself with and inside Apple’s overpriced walls.
    edited April 2018
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