Apple keeps lead in slumping global tablet market

Apple reported it sold 13.1 million of its iPads in fourth quarter, a drop of nearly 19 percent from a year ago, but enough to lead the category.


Apple remains the leader in a global tablet computer market that has been in an extended slump for the past two years, according to surveys released Thursday.

Tablet sales in the fourth quarter fell 20 percent from a year earlier to 52.9 million units, according to the research firm IDC. A separate survey by Strategy Analytics said sales slumped nine percent to 63.5 million.

IDC analysts said overall 2016 sales fell 15.6 percent to 178.4 million units, in a second consecutive annual decline following a period of sizzling growth.

The analysts said many consumers are moving away from the “slate” tablets to more versatile devices with detachable keyboards, which may be categorized as either tablets or PCs.

“The sentiment around the tablet market continues to grow stale despite a lot of talk about vendors pivoting their product portfolios toward the detachable segment,” IDC’s Ryan Reith said.

“Typical tablets without a dedicated keyboard, which IDC refers to as slate tablets, are continuing to lose relevancy across all regions and, as a result, we see the decline happening globally.”

Apple this week reported it sold 13.1 million of its iPads in the fourth quarter, a drop of nearly 19 percent from a year ago, but enough to lead the category.

According to IDC, Apple and the iPad held 24.7 percent of the market, while Strategy Analytics estimated its market share at 20.6 percent.

Number-two vendor

Samsung was the number-two vendor with more than eight million tablets sold.

IDC estimated Amazon sold 5.2 million of its Fire tablets to lift its market share to nearly 10 percent. But Strategy Analytics figures show Amazon selling 4.2 million units for a 6.7 percent share.

Amazon does not disclose sales figures for its devices.

Strategy Analytics said in its report that Amazon’s low-cost devices, which sell for as little as $49, have had some success “reaching a broad range of consumers looking for an entertainment tablet with key content tie-ins to the growing Amazon ecosystem.”

The other manufacturers in the top five were China-based Lenovo and Huawei, according to the surveys.

Sales of Windows-powered tablets grew 19 percent from a year ago and accounted for 16 percent of the market, according to Strategy Analytics.

Strategy Analytics analyst Eric Smith said Microsoft, with its Surface family of devices, is the largest vendor in the Windows segment with about 15 percent, but that its partners – including Lenovo, Asus, Dell, and HP – sell the majority of Windows tablets.






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