Samsung Galaxy Mega

Phablets eating into tablet market, IDC

Trade
Image: Samsung Galaxy Mega

5 December 2013

Large smartphones with 5″ or larger displays – often called phablets – are eating into sales of smaller tablets with screens in the 7″ range.

The phablet cannibalisation trend is so significant that IDC lowered its long-term tablet forecast from 227.4 million tablet shipments worldwide to 221.3 million. Its 2017 tablet forecast even further, pegging shipments at 386.3 million, down from 407 million units.

In some markets, especially the Asia Pacific region, consumers have already decided to buy a large smartphone rather than a small tablet. Tablet purchases in South Korea have declined while larger smartphone purchases have increased. IDC researchers there are forecasting that 2013 tablet shipments will drop below 2012’s figures.

“Korea is a unique case, but it could very well be the precursor to that happening in more countries and regions,” said Tom Mainelli, an IDC analyst.

“People in some countries have limited money to spend, so they tend to go for a large phone because they can call and browse on it and read e-mail, as opposed to getting a small phone and a tablet,” said IDC analyst Jitesh Ubrani, who added that the phablet has become a “jack of all trades”.

The cannibalisation of tablets is less of a concern in the US and Canada where expendable income is more available. In North America, analysts are more worried about market saturation, with tablets bought up in huge numbers going back to 2010. The market is set to turn from high growth to “mostly a replacement market,” Mainelli said.

IDC also found that tablets in emerging countries aren’t as popular as phablets because there is less Wi-Fi at home and less traditional home PC usage. “We think many of those cheap whitebox tablets being used in emerging markets are essentially replacing DVD players, with the content side-loaded onto them from various sources,” Mainelli said. “Also, larger smartphones took off there first.”

In addition to large smartphones’ cutting into tablet sales, Mainelli said wearable devices and other new computing categories would temper tablet growth in coming years. He didn’t estimate by how much, however.

As large phone use rises, Mainelli said it’s possible that the tablet market will shift back to larger tablets in a reversal of the recent trend toward sub-8″ tablets. “I tend to think that is what will happen in the US,” he said. One example is the new iPad Air, with a 9.7″ display.

IDC predicts about 220 million tablets with screens that are under 8″ will ship globally in 2017, with another 145 million tablets shipping that are between 8″ and 11″, and about 20 million with screen sizes of more than 11″.

Analyst firm Canalys said in November that phablets larger than 5″ accounted for 22% of all smartphones shipped in the third quarter.

The phablets, made mainly by Samsung and running the Android operating system, include the 6.3″ Galaxy Mega and the 5.7″ Galaxy Note 3. Apple’s new iPhone 4S and 4C are still 4″. devices, but the company launched a smaller tablet, the iPad mini, with a 7.9″. screen in November 2012.

Canalys recently predicted that tablet shipments will reach 285 million units in 2014, about 15 million higher than IDC’s forecast for 2014 of 270.5 million.

Also in 2014, Canalys said tablets will almost outship all PCs combined, a category including desktops and laptops.

This article was originally published at Computerworld.com

Read More:


Back to Top ↑

TechCentral.ie