Staff Reporters
Nov 8, 2010

Asia-Pacific helps push global handset sales : ABI Research

SINGAPORE - Mobile handset shipments is due to reach 1.34 billion by the end of 2010 and rise to 1.7 billion by 2015, steered by the demand in Asia, particularly, China, India and Indonesia.

Mobile market sees a huge demand in Asia
Mobile market sees a huge demand in Asia

According to ABI Research, total shipments of mobile handsets are expected to total 1.34 billion by the end of 2010. Maintaining this momentum all the way to 2015 should see the number rise to more than 1.7 billion handset shipments.  

According to ABI Research industry analyst Celia Bo, “The Asia-Pacific region currently makes the largest contribution to global handset sales accounting for 38 per cent of total shipments."

She states that while China is a major source of handset sales, India and Indonesia are also expanding their domestic demand.
 
The Indian handset market is expected to grow from 84.3 million handsets in 2009 to 104 million in 2010, a year-on-year growth of 24 per cent.

Indonesia's 240 million people purchased 33 million handsets in 2009 and that figure is expected to surpass 37 million by the end of 2010. Both markets have been fertile ground for Nokia and the Finnish manufacturer has enjoyed a market-share by producing ultra-low cost handsets that are robust, user-friendly and at the right price-point.

However, while aspiring middle classes purchase high-end feature phones and smartphones, a number of local handset vendors such as Micromax and Spice Mobile in India, and Nexian and SPC Mobile in Indonesia, have stepped in to cater to the low-end and mid-tier segment.
Notes VP and practice director Kevin Burden, “Their game-plan is to push the envelope on providing increasingly feature-rich handsets at aggressive price-points.” 

Related Articles

Just Published

2 hours ago

Ads next to 'brand unsafe' content deliver stronger ...

Brand lift of 40% on 'unsafe' content was observed versus 18% on 'safe' content.

11 hours ago

Brands must eradicate the 'insight famine' to find ...

The fifth annual 'State of Creativity' report finds that more than half of brands describe their ability to develop high-quality insights as poor or very poor.

12 hours ago

Sweaty Betty kicks off campaign focused on leg

'Wear the damn shorts’ empowers women to embrace their legs and challenge beauty standards.

13 hours ago

Is a four-day working week viable for adland?

A small number of agencies have embraced the four-day working week, and while agency leaders seem to be up for it, there are a few hurdles to overcome before it can become a more general reality.