The global smartphone market has momentum going into the year-end holiday shopping season, according to preliminary figures released Thursday by International Data Corporation (IDC). An estimated 373.1 million smartphones were shipped worldwide during the third quarter of this year in a 2.7 percent rise from the same period in 2016, IDC said in a statement. While IDC analysts considered the growth low, they saw it as a sign "the industry still has momentum."
"Collectively, the industry continues to grow, but at a much slower pace than past years," said Ryan Reith, a vice president with the global market intelligence firm. "What is clear is that the 'Others' outside of the top five leading vendors continue to struggle and the industry leaders are quickly forming two camps." Reith depicted those camps as those driving high-volume sales - Apple, Huawei, and Samsung - and a few Chinese smartphone makers finding traction outside that country.
The five top smartphone makers all shipped more units than they did in the same quarter last year, according to IDC. South Korean smartphone titan Samsung remained the overall leader, shipping 83.3 million handsets in a 9.5 percent increase from the same quarter last year, according to IDC. Apple's new iPhone 8 models helped its third quarter shipments climb 2.6 percent to 46.7 million, and on Friday the California technology giant was releasing a new flagship iPhone X model with a starting price of $999.
China-based Huawei shipped 39.1 million smartphones in a "healthy" increase of 16.1 percent from a year earlier, according to IDC. New Huawei models "will challenge both Apple and Samsung at the top of the market regarding premium flagship offerings as well as in the race for overall worldwide market dominance," IDC said.
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