Over 32 million smartphones shipped in India in Q3: IDC

November 15, 2016 04:33 pm | Updated December 02, 2016 03:39 pm IST - New Delhi

Three models of China's Xiaomi Mi phones are pictured during their launch in New Delhi in this July 15, 2014 file photo. The court order that banned Chinese mobile maker Xiaomi from selling its phones in India has halted its breakneck expansion into the world's fastest growing major smartphone market and could be just the start of a string of patent challenges. To match story XIAOMI-INDIA/ REUTERS/Anindito Mukherjee/Files (INDIA - Tags: BUSINESS TELECOMS)

Three models of China's Xiaomi Mi phones are pictured during their launch in New Delhi in this July 15, 2014 file photo. The court order that banned Chinese mobile maker Xiaomi from selling its phones in India has halted its breakneck expansion into the world's fastest growing major smartphone market and could be just the start of a string of patent challenges. To match story XIAOMI-INDIA/ REUTERS/Anindito Mukherjee/Files (INDIA - Tags: BUSINESS TELECOMS)

Smartphone shipments in India grew 11 per cent to 32.3 million smartphones in July-September quarter compared to the year-ago period, driven by distributors gearing up for festive season and online sales, research firm IDC today said.

This is the first time that smartphone shipment has crossed the 30-million mark in a quarter.

According to IDC’s quarterly mobile phone tracker, 29.1 million smartphones were shipped to India in the third quarter of 2015. The shipment was higher by 17.4 per cent than April-June 2016 quarter when shipment stood at 27.5 million units.

The overall mobile phone market (smartphone and feature phones) shipment closed at 72.3 million units in the third quarter with an 18.1 per cent sequential growth.

“This seasonal spike in the third quarter of the year can be attributed to the channel preparation for the festive season, mega online sales and early import of smartphones owing to Chinese holidays in October,” IDC India Senior Market Analyst Client Devices Karthik J said.

IDC expects to end this year with a higher single-digit annual growth, considering the smartphone performance till the third quarter.

“Entry of the new vendors has extended the feature phone supply for the past few quarters. However, with expected entry of Jio in the feature phone market, the category is expected to grow significantly. This, in turn, might further slow down the feature phone to smartphone migration,” IDC India Senior Research Manager Navkendar Singh said.

Samsung led the tally with 23 per cent share, followed by Lenovo (and Motorola) at 9.6 per cent and Micromax slipping to third spot with 7.5 per cent share in July-September 2016.

“The vendor (Micromax) is facing tremendous pressure from other local vendors in sub-USD 100 segment and Chinese players in USD 100-150,” the report said.

Xiaomi had 7.4 per cent share and Reliance Jio 7 per cent in the said quarter.

The report said Xiaomi has grown more than 2.5 times over the same period last year. As it plans to expand footprint in the offline channel, competition is likely to get intense in Indian smartphone market.

Share of online sales increased to 31.6 per cent due to strong performance by key online players, primarily from China-based vendors, IDC said.

Also, closing weeks of the September quarter witnessed incremental supplies as many vendors were preparing their inventories for the online festival sales in October. Lenovo Group continued to lead online channel, followed by Xiaomi.

Feature phone shipment registered 39.9 million units in the said quarter, up 18.6 per cent quarter-on-quarter.

However, this was down 12.4 per cent year-on-year, which pulled down the overall mobile phone shipment marginally by 3.3 per cent, IDC said.

“Continuous investment from China-based vendors on retail expansion and high-decibel marketing have led to disruption in the plans of home-grown vendors to some extent. To remain relevant, home-grown vendors are counting on the feature phone market even though they are facing certain supply issues for a few components,” IDC India Market Analyst Client Devices Jaipal Singh said.

IDC said the migration from feature phone to smartphone has slowed, helping India-based vendors maintain their dominance in the overall mobile market.

Though the feature phone market is consolidated with a few key vendors, it is also witnessing the emergence of new brands, it added.

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