According to the latest quarterly China mobile phone tracker
report from International Data Corporation (IDC) on May 4, shipments in the
Chinese smartphone market grew 0.8% year-over-year in the first quarter of
2017. Huawei delivered strong results with shipment of 20.8 million, up 25.5%
from a year earlier and ranking No. 1 in the country.
The data show that in addition to Huawei’s growth, shipments
of OPPO and VIVO also increased but Apple, Xiaomi and other brands saw sales
decline, among which Apple suffered the largest slump, down 26.7%
year-over-year. IDC expects overall growth in the Chinese smartphone market in
2017 to be lower than in 2016, which saw growth of 8.6%. The first half of the
year will see a flat trend and growth will pick up in the second half.
IDC believes cyclical changes led to the slowdown in China’s
smartphone market in the first quarter. Firstly, the overall market saw
weakness in the quarter due to cyclicality, with the Spring Festival holiday
season prompting a stagnation of shipments across channels. Secondly, as phone
makers increased shipments in the fourth quarter of last year, pushing
inventory to a higher level, in the first quarter they were actively cutting
capacity and consequentially reduced new model launches. To clear inventory for
upcoming Spring/Summer new product releases, vendors will digest existing
models. Despite this, consumer demand for smartphones remains strong,
especially for upgraded devices.
Huawei, the world's No.3 smartphone maker, maintained its dominance
in the Chinese market with year-over-year growth of 25.5% thanks to the brand’s
stronghold in the mid-tier and high-end segments: it has consolidated its
position in the premium market with offerings including the P-series and
Mate-series. The IDC report shows the Honor sub-brand also delivered strong
results in the middle market, with market share posting double-digit growth.
Against the backdrop of a slowdown in the smartphone market,
the competitive landscape has seen competition intensify as consumers are
showing robust demand for smartphones, especially for upgraded devices.To meet
consumer demand, manufacturers are maintaining a rapid pace of product
iterations and upgrades, continuing to step up marketing efforts, which are
mainly reflected in the following aspects:
First, Chinese vendors are striving to disrupt the extant
competitive landscape in the higher-end segment. Although Apple has been
dominating the high-end market, tier-one domestic smartphone brands are rapidly
increasing their market share in the premium segment. Chinese players can only
gain advantages in future competition after securing a stable position in the
middle- and high-end market.
Second, the rapid expansion of offline experience stores is
now a key battleground. In the past year,top Chinese phone brands have paid
more attention to offline channel expansion and been planning the construction
of experience stores. For example, Huawei opened more than 1,000 brand
experience stores in central business districts of key cities; OPPO is
accelerating the rollout of flagship stores in select locations of tier-one and
tier-two cities; and other vendors are also expanding offline experience
stores.
IDC believes that as users pay more attention to brand
experience, smartphone experience store should be more focused on how to build
close relationships between brands and their users and provide those users with
a variety of experience-based services.
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