Global smartphone sales fell 14% in February due to coronavirus

(Reuters) — Global smartphone sales tumbled 14% in February as the coronavirus spread in China and overseas, Counterpoint Research said on Thursday, a likely harbinger of more declines as outbreaks worsen in many parts of the world.

The outbreak prompted Apple and other smartphone makers to shut their China stores in February and government data suggests Apple sold less than 500,000 smartphones in the mainland Chinese market during the month.

China, which saw sales drop 38% in February from a year earlier, is now showing signs of recovery with many stores re-opening in mid-March.

There are also signs of recovery in South Korea, but for other parts of the world, "the worst is yet to come," said Jean Park, a senior analyst at Counterpoint.

Smartphone makers are facing new supply chain disruptions as more countries impose lockdown orders. On Tuesday, Foxconn, one of Apple's key suppliers, said it would suspend operations in India in compliance with government orders.

VB TRansform 2020: The AI event for business leaders. San Francisco July 15 - 16VB TRansform 2020: The AI event for business leaders. San Francisco July 15 - 16

(Reporting by Josh Horwitz and David Kirton; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

Samsung Electronics' revises down Q3 earnings estimate

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

NASA Wants You to Photograph Starlink Satellites With Your Smartphone

India's top smartphone maker Xiaomi says growing anti-China sentiment has not affected business

Intelligence Brief: Is 5G a smartphone lifeline?