By Che Pan and Laurie Chen
BEIJING, April 17 (Reuters) – Apple’s iPhone shipments surged 20% in China in the first quarter, for the strongest โgrowth among major vendors, despite an overall decline as rising prices โof memory chips boosted costs, data from Counterpoint Research showed.
Overall smartphone shipments dropped 4% in the โworld’s largest smartphone market in the period from January to March, hit by supply chain disruptions and the soaring chip prices.
But telecoms giant Huawei and Apple, the two largest vendors in the market, bucked the trend, reporting growth of 2% โand 20% respectively.
“As most rivals โ raise prices, Apple stands out for value, with Chinese consumers knowing its products last at least three years,” Ivan Lam, โ senior analyst at Counterpoint Research.
Huawei’s shipments were lifted by strong demand across both its high-end and budget ranges, including the Enjoy 90 series, giving it a 20% โmarket share โin the quarter, Lam said.
Huawei retained โthe top spot, followed by Apple โwith a share of 19%.
Smartphone vendors in China have raised prices for budget handsets to protect margins in the battle with elevated memory chip costs.
Xiaomi slipped to sixth place with a plunge of 35% in shipments. Lam attributed the sharp decline to a high base effect, after Xiaomi benefited from aggressive โprice cuts and government subsidies in the โcorresponding period last year.
Shipments by Oppo and Honor โalso fell 5% and 3% โrespectively, though Vivo saw a rise of 2%, buoyed by โstrong sales during the Lunar New โYear holiday.
Lam expected more โheadwinds for the market in the second quarter, particularly as Chinese brands look to raise prices further.
“However, we expect Apple and Huawei to โfare relatively better, with โHuawei potentially seeing further shipment growth driven by solid demand for its โlower-end devices,” Lam said.
(Reporting by Che Pan and Laurie Chen; โEditing by Miyoung Kim and Clarence Fernandez)