Friday, January 23, 2026
25.9 C
Lagos

Nigeria Drives 23m Units African Smartphone Market in Qtr3

While market saturation and U.S.–China tensions are placing the global smartphone market under intense pressure, new research from International Data Corporations shows that the African smartphone market saw shipments increase 4.0% quarter on quarter in Q3 2019 to total 22.6 million units.

The firm’s latest Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker shows that Africa’s overall mobile phone market reached 55.8 million units in Q3 2019, with feature phones accounting for 59.4% of this total versus smartphones at 40.6%.

The growth in the smartphone space was spurred by the strong performance of the three biggest markets in Africa – Nigeria, South Africa, and Egypt.

This was largely driven by the huge influx of affordable models that have recently been launched in these markets while the relative stability of the Nigerian naira (NGN) and appreciation of the Egyptian Pound (EGP) also helped stir an increase in consumer demand.

Transsion brands (Tecno, Infinix, and Itel) continued to lead the feature phone space in Q3 2019, with a combined unit share of 64.0%. Nokia was next in line with 10.0% share. In the smartphone space, Transsion (36.2%), Samsung (23.9%), and Huawei (11.4%) led the way in unit terms; however, in value terms, Samsung was the clear leader with 33.2% share, followed by Transsion (22.4%) and Huawei (15.6%).

“Samsung shook the market up this year with the launch of its new A series of devices, which combine excellent value for money with Samsung’s well-established brand equity,” says Taher Abdel-Hameed, a Senior Research Analyst at IDC. “This move spurred a significant increase in Samsung’s shipments across most African countries.

“Samsung recorded remarkable year-on-year growth of 61.4% in the low-end price band ($100-$200) in Q3 2019, and its move into this space has pushed Chinese brands to offer more affordable devices. Local African brands have traditionally focused on filling in for the absence of global brands in the entry-level smartphone segment, so these latest developments have put them in a difficult situation, causing their volumes to decline 33.6% year on year in Q3 2019.

Africa’s smartphone market is also changing from a price band perspective, with the $100-$200 category seeing its share of shipments increase from 31.4% in Q3 2018 to 39.8% in Q3 2019. This growth was largely driven by the launch of new Samsung and Transsion models.

The ultra-low-end band (below $100) has been declining in recent quarters and losing share to the low-end price band as brands move their device portfolios towards larger screen sizes and 4G capabilities.

“2019 will prove to have been a pivotal year for the African smartphone market,” says Ramazan Yavuz, a Research Manager at IDC. “4G devices are now dominating the market like never before, accounting for 73.0% of shipments. Screen sizes are also getting larger, with devices equipped with 6-inch screens and above now accounting for 41.7% of shipments, up from just 9.0% a year ago.”

IDC expects Africa’s overall mobile phone market to total 218.2 million units for 2019 as a whole. Smartphone shipments will total 91.0 million units for the year, up 3.2% on 2018, and the introduction of more affordable devices will help drive progress in this space over the coming years.

Feature phone shipments are expected to remain flat at 127.2 million units for 2019, up just 0.1% year on year, as the transition to smartphone gathers momentum.

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

ONEDOSH Raises $3m Pre-Seed to Build Global Stablecoin Payment Rails

Money should move without borders. It doesn’t, yet. OneDosh has...

Unity Bank Unveils Enhanced Unifi Mobile App to Deepen Digital Banking Experience

Nigeria’s retail lender, Unity Bank Plc, has launched an...

NCC Holds Stakeholder Engagement on Spectrum Roadmap 2026-2030

L-R: Deputy Director, Huawei Business Environment/Affairs Nigeria, Dr. Nihinlola ...

Nigeria: Illicit Drugs and the Challenge of Addiction

By Christiana Daniel ‎Nigeria’s fight against illicit drugs has intensified...

Gospel Artiste, Titilope Baptist-Sanusi, Speaks on Her ‘I WON’ Album

Titilope Baptist-Sanusi, popularly known as Baptista (BaptistaOnMiC), is a...

Topics

BudgIT Charges Buhari to Prioritise Oil Sector Reform

President Buhari Following the outcome of the Presidential Election, which...

HR: Mercer South Africa, EZ37 Solutions Nigeria in Strategic Partnership

Mercer South Africa (Consulting) (Pty) Limited announced on 25...

Tinubu Commends Tolaram for Reposing Confidence in Nigeria’s Economy

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has commended the Indonesian business...

IATA Postpones 2020 AGM over COVID-19

  The International Air Transport Association (IATA) announced the postponement...

Paylater, Credit Mobile App in Nigeria Tops 1m Customers

In Nigeria, a country of nearly 200 million people,...

Japan, UNDP Collaborate on Peace Operations in Nigeria

The Government of Japan and the United Nations Development Programme...

The Rise of $1bn e-Commerce Industry in Nigeria

According to Euromonitor International data, Nigeria boasts the largest online market for apparel and footwear in Africa, which is expected to grow from US$104 million in 2014 to $1billion in 2019. The building blocks for future developments in e-tailing are emerging in sub-Saharan Africa, as a growing middle class and young population create a demand for products that store-based retail simply cannot meet, due to a lack of shopping malls and gridlocked cities.

Lagos Launches Youth Climate Campaign, Unveils TAOOMMA as Campaign Influencer

L-R: City Adviser, Lagos, C40 Cities, Maximus Ugwuoke; Representative...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img