The global smartphone market grew nearly 90 per cent in the third quarter, with enormous gains by Samsung and HTC, market research firm IDC reported Thursday.
Vendors shipped 81 million smartphones, up 89.5 per cent from the 42.8 million units shipped in the third quarter of 2009. For the first three quarters, vendors shipped 200.6 million smartphones, an increase of 67 per cent over the 119.6 million shipped for the first three quarters in 2009.
Smartphone growth outpaces growth in overall mobile phones by six times, as customers seek browsing and multimedia functions on their mobile devices and as carriers expand the range of smartphone brands, IDC said.
“Smartphone makers have the wind behind their sales,” said Kevin Restivo, an IDC analyst. He said the transition to smartphones appears unabated.
Nokia still leads the pack, with a 32.7 per cent share of the market and 26.5 million smartphones shipped in the third quarter. Even with 61.6 per cent year-over-year growth, Nokia’s market share is shrinking amid new competition. Nokia launched the C7 and its first Symbian 3 device, the N8, and has plans for a device using the MeeGo operating system in 2011.
Apple ‘s iPhone boosted its rank to second place, with a 17.4 per cent market share and 14.1 million phones shipped, a 90 per cent increase from the prior year. A well-publicized problem with the iPhone 4 antenna didn’t dampen demand, since the company swiftly fixed the problem , IDC said.
BlackBerry maker Research in Motion was third, with a 15.3 per cent share and 12.4 million smartphones shipped, an increase of 45.9 per cent. The number of shipments reached a record high, but RIM still fell from second place amid the competition. Most notably, RIM released a BlackBerry 6.0 operating system on the BlackBerry Torch 9800 with both a touchscreen and a physical keyboard.
Samsung came in fourth but posted the highest growth compared with a year ago of 453.8 per cent with 7.2 million smartphones shipped. It launched the Galaxy S smartphone line , running Android , and will be one of he first to release a Windows Phone 7 device.
HTC was in fifth place with 176 per cent growth and 5.8 million units shipped. It also sells Android smartphones globally and plans to ship five different WP7 phones this quarter.
Android-based phones outsold iPhones in the U.S. by nearly 2 to 1 in the third quarter, NPD Group reported earlier this week.