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​iPhone sales decline for first time as Samsung hangs onto smartphone crown

“For Samsung to stop falling sales of premium smartphones, it needs to introduce new flagship smartphones that can compete with iPhones."

Global sales of smartphones to end users totalled 403 million units in the fourth quarter of 2015, a 9.7 percent increase over the same period in 2014.

However, this was their slowest growth rate since 2008 with analyst firm Gartner reporting that Apple suffered its first decline in sales of smartphones - iPhone sales were down 4.4 percent.

In 2015 as a whole, smartphone sales reached 1.4 billion units, an increase of 14.4 percent from 2014 and as such, Samsung is still the number one vendor, but Gartner believes the company faces challenges.

“Low-cost smartphones in emerging markets, and strong demand for premium smartphones, continued to be the driving factors,” says Anshul Gupta, Research Director, Gartner.

“An aggressive pricing from local and Chinese brands in the midrange and entry-level segments of emerging markets led to consumers upgrading more quickly to affordable smartphones.”

Gupta says that 85 percent of users in the emerging Asia/Pacific market are replacing their current midrange phone with the same category of phone.

In addition, currency devaluations against the U.S. dollar in many emerging markets are putting further margin pressure on many vendors that import devices.

Current market conditions are prompting some vendors to consider setting up manufacturing operations in India and Indonesia to avoid being hit by future unfavourable currency devaluations and high import taxes.

In the fourth quarter of 2015, Samsung and Huawei were the only two top-five smartphone vendors to increase their sales to end users with Apple suffering its first decline in sales of smartphones.

Although Samsung was the No.1 vendor, Gartner analysts believe the company faces challenges.

“For Samsung to stop falling sales of premium smartphones, it needs to introduce new flagship smartphones that can compete with iPhones and stop the churn to iOS devices,” Gupta adds.

With an increase in sales of 53 percent in the fourth quarter of 2015, Huawei achieved the best performance year over year.

Huawei’s increased brand visibility overseas, and its decision to sell almost only smartphones, gave it a higher average selling price in 2015.

For total sales of smartphones in 2015, Samsung maintained the No. 1 position, but its market share declined by 2.2 percentage points.

In 2015, Apple sold 225.9 million iPhones, to achieve a market share of almost 16 percent.

Meanwhile, Huawei’s smartphone sales approached 104 million units, up 53 percent year over year.

In terms of smartphone operating system (OS) market, Android increased 16.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2015, to account for 80.7 percent of the global total.

“Android benefited from continued demand for affordable smartphones and from the slowdown of iOS units in the premium market in the fourth quarter of 2015,” adds Roberta Cozza, Research Director, Gartner.

In the premium segment, despite Apple's slower year-over-year fourth-quarter sales, Apple narrowed the market share gap with Samsung in 2015 as a whole.