Apple's iPad extends global market lead thanks to affordable 10.2-inch model
Apple extended its lead over the global tablet sector in the fourth quarter of 2019, according to fresh statistics from research firm IDC, with the company gobbling up 36.5% of the market on strong demand for the new 10.2-inch iPad.
Apple's latest 10.2-inch iPad variant, released in September as an affordable alternative to iPad Pro, accounted for 65% of 15.9 million total iPad shipments during the three months ending in December, IDC estimates.
The tech giant maintained its dominant position during the important holiday quarter with a 36.5% marketshare, up 22.7% from 12.9 million shipments and a 29.6% share notched in the year ago quarter. Full-year metrics reveal similar results, with Apple taking 34.6% of the market on shipments of 49.9 million iPads, up 15.2% from a 43.3% marketshare on 43.3 million units shipped in 2018.
Apple's success comes as the wider industry contracts. Slate tablet shipments fell 79.3% to hit an all-time low during the last quarter of 2019, while full-year tablet shipments shrunk 1.5% year-over-year.
Samsung trailed Apple in quarter four with 7 million units shipped for a 16.1% share of the market, down 7.4% from 7.6 million shipments and a 17.3% marketshare in the same period last year. The Korean tech titan shipped 21.7 million units across 2019, down 7.2% from the year prior.
Huawei and Amazon placed third and fourth, respectively, on shipments of 4 million and 3.3 million units. While Huawei experienced a slight 2.8% slowdown in growth year-over-year, Amazon suffered a massive 29% downturn over the same period. Despite dismal holiday sales, Amazon was the only company aside from Apple to exhibit growth during a tough 2019.
Lenovo rounded out the top five with 2.5 million units shipped to capture 5.8% of the market during quarter four, up 8.3% year-over-year. Whole year sales dipped 4.3% from 8.8 million to 8.5 million, consistent with industry trends.
Apple is expected to release refreshed iPad Pro iterations in the first half of 2020, with rumors suggesting the platform will introduce an all-new rear-facing 3D sensor to bolster augmented reality applications.
Apple's latest 10.2-inch iPad variant, released in September as an affordable alternative to iPad Pro, accounted for 65% of 15.9 million total iPad shipments during the three months ending in December, IDC estimates.
The tech giant maintained its dominant position during the important holiday quarter with a 36.5% marketshare, up 22.7% from 12.9 million shipments and a 29.6% share notched in the year ago quarter. Full-year metrics reveal similar results, with Apple taking 34.6% of the market on shipments of 49.9 million iPads, up 15.2% from a 43.3% marketshare on 43.3 million units shipped in 2018.
Apple's success comes as the wider industry contracts. Slate tablet shipments fell 79.3% to hit an all-time low during the last quarter of 2019, while full-year tablet shipments shrunk 1.5% year-over-year.
Samsung trailed Apple in quarter four with 7 million units shipped for a 16.1% share of the market, down 7.4% from 7.6 million shipments and a 17.3% marketshare in the same period last year. The Korean tech titan shipped 21.7 million units across 2019, down 7.2% from the year prior.
Huawei and Amazon placed third and fourth, respectively, on shipments of 4 million and 3.3 million units. While Huawei experienced a slight 2.8% slowdown in growth year-over-year, Amazon suffered a massive 29% downturn over the same period. Despite dismal holiday sales, Amazon was the only company aside from Apple to exhibit growth during a tough 2019.
Lenovo rounded out the top five with 2.5 million units shipped to capture 5.8% of the market during quarter four, up 8.3% year-over-year. Whole year sales dipped 4.3% from 8.8 million to 8.5 million, consistent with industry trends.
Apple is expected to release refreshed iPad Pro iterations in the first half of 2020, with rumors suggesting the platform will introduce an all-new rear-facing 3D sensor to bolster augmented reality applications.
Comments
22.7% up, while just about everybody else is in a steep decline.
It's good that Apple offers the budget model 10.2 iPad.
There's an iPad available for all people and all budgets. From the cheaply priced 10.2, all the way up to a maxed out iPad Pro.
I recently bought an iPad Air to give to somebody as a present, which falls right in the middle, between the 10.2 and the Pro.
Who the hell would spend money on one of the crap tablets from somebody else when they can just get an iPad?
The few people buying Android tablets are not very smart people, I don't care how little they paid for them. Being poor is no excuse for ignorance. It's just a bad purchase, no matter how you cut, slice and dice it. The tablet eco-system on Android is virtually non-existent, the hardware is garbage and the devices will have a much shorter lifespan than any iPad. Perhaps that's why many poor people remain poor, they're not known to make wise financial decisions.
Oh, and yes, I also have a 3rd Gen iPad Pro 12.9. Each device serves its purpose!
Why would you view media on an Amazon tablet when you have an iPad Pro?
Do you not notice the difference in display quality, colors and smoothness? Are the streams you are watching very poor/low quality, low bitrate?
I don't have any fish, but if I did, I wouldn't trust them to any Android tablet, but that's just me.
When I bought my iPad Pro a while back, I was very happy with the price I paid and I would say that I got it for cheap! That doesn't mean that an iPad Pro is a cheap product of course.
I guess that's just the way I talk or write, especially when talking about items on sale, regardless of their cost.
If I saved 10% on a million dollar house purchase, then I'd also say that I got the house for cheap.
Oh wait, no I haven't. Macs and iPhones are not good value any more. When do you define yesteryear? 20 years ago? Because 10 years ago Macs were better value than now. You realise no one pays any attention to you @StrangeDays, your head is so far up Apple's ass you're no better than a troll.