Nokia leads pack, but race tightens

Nov 23, 2005
Nokia phones on display in Helsinki

As mobile phones become ever more indispensable not just as a communication device but as an Internet provider, music player or mini TV, companies are facing fiercer competition to stay ahead in the game.

While few were surprised by the fact that Finnish mobile giant Nokia has retained is top spot as the most popular handset manufacturer in the latest quarter with over 32 percent of the total global market, there was a shake-up among the other major providers, according to the latest results compiled by Gartner.

Gartner found in its latest global mobile sales report released Tuesday that several manufacturers jostled for second place, with Schaumberg, Ill.-based Motorola taking over Samsung in the third quarter with 18.7 percent of total market share, compared to the South Korean manufacturer's 12.5 percent.

"Motorola did well with sales of the RAZR phone, with 12 million units sold by the end of September. With prices falling and additional colors introduced, this phone has grown in popularity and raised Motorola's profile in the market," Gartner reported.

Meanwhile, industry analysts were particularly struck by the fact that Sony Ericsson climbed up to fourth place, having been in sixth place a year ago. The rising demand for the recently launched Walkman phone was seen as one of the biggest factors pushing up demand for products by the joint Japanese-Swedish company.

Still, the steady rise of overall demand for cellular phones was not simply due to people wanting to trade up their existing handsets for a more sophisticated version. Rather, there has been a boom in sales in emerging markets, where people are buying their first personal phones.

"Year-on-year sales grew in all regions as replacement sales in mature markets such as Western Europe and North America continued to drive growth, while users in emerging markets joined mobile networks and acquired their first mobile device," said Carolina Milanesi, principal analyst for mobile terminals research at Gartner.

Indeed, the overall market grew to 205.37 million units worldwide by Sept. 30, up from 168.29 million a year ago, according to Gartner. But the research group pointed out that even market behemoth Nokia saw sales in the Western Hemisphere weaker than they had been in Western Europe and Asia.

Sales in Western Europe were strong as "users in this region continue to be attracted by new models coming onto the market, and vendors shipped quite a few new products in the third quarter. Operators in Germany and Italy recorded an excellent quarter with the addition of more than 1 million new subscribers in a single quarter," Milanesi said.

As for sales in Asia, Gartner reported that demand increased by 27 percent from the same period a year ago, with sales in India and China being particularly strong.

"In China, the build-up to the golden week holiday, which falls on the first week of October, helped to boost sales at the very end of the quarter," said Ann Liang, principal analyst for mobile terminals research based in Taiwan.

Meanwhile in Japan, sales of wide-band code-division multiple access, or CDMA, phones surpassed demand for personal digital cellular handsets for the first time, the group said.

"While seeking a new killer function, operators and vendors tried to spread their portfolios to meet varied user needs," said Nahoko Mitsuyama, principal analyst for mobile communications based in Tokyo.

Copyright 2005 by United Press International

Explore further: US report urges action on 'unprecedented' IP theft

add to favorites email to friend print save as pdf

Related Stories

Android trumps Apple in smartphone sales

May 16, 2013

Google's Android mobile system boosted its lead in the global smartphone market over Apple in early 2013, while Microsoft's Windows edged into third place, a survey showed Thursday.

Fewer Facebook users take a liking to its new Home software

May 16, 2013

It may be too soon to call Facebook Home a flop. But it's clearly not the breakout hit that some expected. One month after its splashy debut, fewer and fewer people are downloading Facebook's new mobile software. It took ...

Android, Samsung extend smartphone lead

May 14, 2013

Google's Android mobile operating system grabbed three out of four smartphones sold in the world in the first quarter of 2013, extending its gains over Apple and its iPhone, a survey showed Tuesday.

Recommended for you

US report urges action on 'unprecedented' IP theft

19 minutes ago

A high-powered commission said Wednesday that intellectual property theft was costing the United States the equivalent of all its exports to Asia and urged a tougher approach to China.

Google boss says company is doing 'right thing' on tax

1 hour ago

Google boss Eric Schmidt insisted Wednesday his company was trying to do the "right thing" as it faces criticism in Britain over the amount of tax it pays, saying it was for countries not companies to decide ...

NASA: Austin, calling Austin. 3-D pizzas to go

2 hours ago

(Phys.org) —The idea of living with 3-D printed food is neither unthinkable nor new; designers and futurists have been looking to 3-D printing as food's next frontier. In 2012, there was news that the Thiel ...

User comments : 0

More news stories

NASA: Austin, calling Austin. 3-D pizzas to go

(Phys.org) —The idea of living with 3-D printed food is neither unthinkable nor new; designers and futurists have been looking to 3-D printing as food's next frontier. In 2012, there was news that the Thiel ...

Forecast for Titan: Wild weather could be ahead

(Phys.org) —Saturn's moon Titan might be in for some wild weather as it heads into its spring and summer, if two new models are correct. Scientists think that as the seasons change in Titan's northern hemisphere, ...