Apple’s no longer among top 5 smartphone vendors in China as domestic brands dominate market

Apple’s no longer among top 5 smartphone vendors in China as domestic brands dominate market


Customers are shopping for the iPhone 15 at the flagship store of Apple Smart Products on Nanjing Road Pedestrian Street in Shanghai, China, on May 24, 2024. 

Costfoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Apple was edged out of the top five smartphone vendors’ list in China in the second quarter, as competition from domestic brands such as Huawei intensifies, according to a Canalys report.

Apple’s market share in China shrank to 14% in the second quarter, the report released Thursday showed, from 15% in the first quarter and 16% in the same period a year ago.

The iPhone maker, which was the third-largest smartphone vendor in the second quarter last year, dropped to the sixth spot with about 9.7 million in shipments, according to CNBC calculations.

“It is the first quarter in history that domestic vendors dominate all the top five positions,” said Lucas Zhong, research analyst at Canalys.

Apple’s shipments have been declining since the first quarter when they dropped 25% year on year to 10 million units.

“Chinese vendors’ strategies for high-end products and their deep collaboration with local supply chains are starting to pay off in hardware and software features. Honor’s latest Magic V3, which leverages GenAI, has significantly enhanced the user experience of foldable devices,” Zhong added.

On the other hand, Apple is facing a “bottleneck” in the Chinese market as it aims to “stabilize retail prices and protect margins of channel partners,” he said.

Localization of Apple Intelligence services in China will be an important move in the next 12 months, Canalys said, as Chinese brands are aggressively incorporating generative AI into their products.

Chinese brands dominate

From April to June, Vivo reclaimed the top spot with 19% market share and 13.1 million units shipped – driven by strong offline and online sales during the “618” e-commerce festival.

Oppo maintained second place with 11.3 million units, buoyed by the launch of its new Reno 12 series. Huawei spinoff Honor came in third with 10.7 million units shipped, marking a 4% year-on-year increase.

Huawei came fourth with 15% market share and 10.6 million shipment units — it had not made it to the top five a year earlier. Huawei’s consumer business has seen a resurgence in China after the launch of its Mate 60 smartphone.

Xiaomi took the fifth spot with the buzz from its first electric car, the SU7, also contributing to solid sales of its K70 and flagship 14 series, Canalys said.

Overall, the Chinese smartphone market grew 10% year on year in second quarter, with shipments exceeding 70 million units, Canalys said.

Tech sell-off confirms nervousness going into earnings reports, says investor Dan Niles



Source

For workers in young, hot world of AI careers, the dream payday is as often ending as layoff nightmare
Technology

For workers in young, hot world of AI careers, the dream payday is as often ending as layoff nightmare

Jose Luis Pelaez Inc | Digitalvision | Getty Images At around the same time Accenture announced its investment in data labeling startup Snorkel AI to power its financial services clients in August, the startup announced it was laying off about 13% of its staff. It wasn’t alone. When Meta took a massive stake in Scale […]

Read More
Trump White House East Wing ballroom project got M boost from YouTube legal settlement
Technology

Trump White House East Wing ballroom project got $22M boost from YouTube legal settlement

Demolition of a section of the East Wing of the White House, during construction on the new ballroom extension of the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025. Aaron Schartz | Bloomberg | Getty Images Tech giant Alphabet is contributing $22 million to help build the White House ballroom under a […]

Read More
Airbnb CEO Chesky says ChatGPT isn’t ‘quite robust enough’ to integrate into travel app
Technology

Airbnb CEO Chesky says ChatGPT isn’t ‘quite robust enough’ to integrate into travel app

Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky said he wants to integrate ChatGPT artificial intelligence capabilities into the travel platform but the software isn’t ready. “The [software development kit] wasn’t quite robust enough for the things we want to do,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Wednesday. Chesky said the company would “probably” want to integrate ChatGPT eventually. […]

Read More