Friday, May 1, 2026
28.1 C
Lagos

Africa’s Mobile Phone Shipments Decline 2.1% in Q3 2018

Africa’s mobile phone market declined 2.1% quarter on quarter (QoQ) in Q3 2018 according to the latest figures announced today by International Data Corporation (IDC).

The global technology research and consulting firm newly released Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker shows overall shipments for the quarter totaled 52.6 million units, with feature phone shipments falling 2.7% QoQ and smartphone shipments declining 1.3% over the same period.

Transsion brands (Tecno, Infinix, and Itel) led the feature phone space in Q3 2018, with a combined unit share of 58.2%. Nokia was next in line with 11.7% share. Transsion, Samsung, and Huawei dominated the smartphone space with respective unit shares of 34.9%, 21.7%, and 10.2%.

However, in value terms, Samsung led the smartphone market with 37.2% share, followed by Transsion (21.0%) and Huawei (13.0%).

There were differing fortunes in the region’s three major markets, with Nigeria suffering a heavy 11.6% QoQ decline in mobile phone shipments, while South Africa and Kenya saw respective QoQ growth of 8.5% and 7.9% in Q3 2018.

“The decline in Nigeria stemmed from a slowdown in government spending, ongoing warfare in the country’s northern states, and market uncertainty in the lead up to elections,” says George Mbuthia, a research analyst at IDC.

“In South Africa, the market’s growth was spurred by the penetration of low-end devices from brands such as Mobicel, Mint, and Nokia, while the launch of entry-level smartphones helped drive growth in Kenya despite increases in taxes and fuel prices placing a significant burden on disposable income in the country.”

While feature phones remain steadfastly popular across Africa, particularly in more rural areas, consumers are increasingly being attracted by smartphone offerings from Chinese brands such as Xiaomi, Oppo, and Huawei, which are actively targeting feature-oriented customers at more economical price points.

“There is a new wave of Chinese brands aggressively pursuing growth opportunities in the region, while the more-established Huawei is also accelerating its marketing efforts and expanding its distribution budget,” says Ramazan Yavuz, a research manager at IDC.

“These brands have quickly progressed along the learning curve and evolved their offerings to perfectly reflect the realities of the region by addressing the diverse pricing and feature needs of the consumer base.”

Looking ahead, IDC expects Africa’s overall mobile phone market to reach 58 million units in Q4 2018, spurred by the festive season and online consumer events such as Black Friday. The introduction of more affordable smartphones in the African market will help drive progress in this space over the coming quarters, while the share of feature phones will decline steadily as the transition to smartphones gathers momentum.

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

NGX Shareholders Commend Leadership at 65th AGM, Seeks Continued Growth

Shareholders of Nigerian Exchange Group Plc (NGX Group) have...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Set for Market Leadership via N5bn Rights Issue

Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc has completed the structuring phase...

All Set for Ecobank 2026 National Schools’ Team Chess Championship

L–R: Austen Osokpor, Head, Marketing and Corporate Communications, Ecobank...

Guinea Insurance Signals Recovery Momentum Amid Elevated Claims

Guinea Insurance Plc has announced its unaudited financial results...

TeamApt CEO says Financial Inclusion is Dependent on Reliable Payment Ecosystem

L-R: Mr. Chike Onwuegbuchi, Chairman, Nigeria Information Technology Reporters’...

Topics

NCRIB Lagos Area Committee, Insurfeel Partner on Donation of Insurance Policies to Students

Demola Olutusin Chairman Lagos Area Committee of the NCRIB The...

FCMB Plans African Expansion in 2 Countries

As Nigeria suffers from the actual global plunge in...

Nigerian, Shola Taylor Appointed Secretary-General of CTO

A Nigerian, Shola Taylor has been appointed secretary-general of the Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation (CTO), an international treaty organisation headquartered in London. Mr Taylor is expected to start in this new role on 17 September this year. A Nigerian citizen, Mr Taylor is currently the chief executive officer of Kemilinks International, a global ICT consultancy firm based in Lagos. A telecommunications engineer by training, he brings to the CTO over 35 years of global experience in ICTs with government and the private sector. Previous positions held include regional director for Africa at Inmarsat (1994 - 1999), space technology coordinator for developing countries at the International Telecommunication Union (ITU, 1993 - 1994) and project director, also at the ITU (1987 - 1993).

New UN, UNDP Resident Representative, Samoura, Promises Full Support to Nigeria

United Nations (UN) Resident Co-ordinator and United Nations Development...

Afreximbank: The $6bn War Chest to Strengthen Food Security in Africa

The African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) has staked US$6 billion...

Unity Bank Customers Win Over N4m in Cashtoken Rewards Promo

Unity Bank customers have claimed over N4 million in...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img