The
milestone coincided with the release of the iPhone 13, and amid
otherwise stagnant demand for handsets as chief rival Huawei
Technologies Co Ltd's [HWT.UL] market share declined.
Apple's smartphone market share reached 23%, a record for the
brand. Its unit sales volume grew 32% year-on-year in the
quarter, while total smartphone sales in China fell 9%,
according to Counterpoint.
Counterpoint analyst Mengmeng Zhang cited a lower starting price
in China and the impact of U.S. sanctions against Huawei,
Apple's main competitor in the high-end segment, as factors.
Apple last ranked as China's top-selling smartphone brand in
late 2015, just after the company launched its iPhone 6, which
attracted Chinese consumers with their large screens.
In 2021 as a whole, Apple ranked as China's third best-selling
smartphone brand with 16% of the market.
Vivo and Oppo, two Android handset brands under the
privately-owned BBK Electronics, ranked first and second with
22% and 21% respectively.
Year on year, Apple's unit sales rose 47% while Huawei's tumbled
68%. Overall smartphone sales in China fell 2%, according to
Counterpoint.
Lengthening upgrade cycles have presented an ongoing dilemma for
Chinese smartphone brands looking to maintain growth at home, as
consumers delay purchasing new devices.
A global chip and component shortage has meanwhile rattled the
entire electronics industry, affecting pricing and margins for
all hardware makers.
(Reporting by Josh Horwitz, Editing by Louise Heavens and John
Stonestreet)
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