Global Smartphone Shipments to Decline 3.5% in 2022, Apple to Be Least Impacted


    Global smartphone shipments are expected to decline 3.5 percent to 1.31 billion units in 2022, according to IDC’s latest Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker forecast. Because of increasing challenges with supply and demand, IDC is significantly reducing its forecast for 2022, which previously predicted 1.6 percent growth.

    iPhone 14 Lineup Feature Teal
    IDC believes Apple will be the “least impacted vendor” because of its control over its supply chain and because iPhone customers are in the higher-priced segment and are not as impacted by macroeconomic issues like inflation.

    Weakening demand, inflation, supply chain constraints, and geo-political tensions are impacting all smartphone vendors, resulting in cutbacks. Even major smartphone manufacturers like Samsung and Apple have cut orders. IDC says that it expects the challenges to ease by the end of the year, barring any new setbacks. The 2023 market is expected to recover with 5 percent growth.

    Semiconductor supply issues are also expected to ease in the second half of 2022.

    “The ongoing semiconductor supply issues will ease up in the second half of 2022. On the SoC side, 4G SoC supply has been tight, but the market continues to shift towards 5G SoCs,” said Phil Solis, research director in IDC’s Enabling Technologies and Semiconductors team. “The bigger problem has been the tight supply of components such as PMICs, display drivers, and discrete Wi-Fi chips. Capacity is being increased for these semiconductors that are made in higher process nodes and newer versions of Wi-Fi chips are being made with newer process nodes. At the same time, demand is dropping. Combined, these supply and demand changes will put the market more in equilibrium.”

    Apple in the second fiscal quarter of 2022 had difficulty meeting demand for the current ‌iPhone‌, iPad, and Mac models because of supply constraints, and the company said in April that it expects those issues to continue into the third fiscal quarter. At the current time, the Mac and ‌iPad‌ appear much more affected by supply chain issues than the ‌iPhone‌.

    Recent rumors have suggested that the iPhone 14 Max is several weeks behind schedule compared to the other ‌iPhone 14‌ models due to supply chain issues, but Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has said that Apple has the situation under control and suppliers are going to be able to work overtime to watch up. Whether or not these supply issues result in delays or fewer iPhones available for purchase in September remains to be seen.

    Popular Stories

    Gurman: Apple Preparing to Debut Enhanced Lock Screen, Windowing in iPadOS, Redesigned Mac Apps, and More at WWDC

    Apple is planning to debut an enhanced Lock Screen with iOS 16, improved multitasking in iPadOS 16, refined navigation in watchOS 9, additional smart home features in tvOS 16, redesigned apps in macOS 13, and more, according Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. In the latest edition of his “Power On” newsletter, Gurman outlined his expectations for all of Apple’s upcoming operating systems, including…

    ‘realityOS’ Trademark Filing Hints at Possible WWDC Announcement [Updated]

    Ahead of WWDC kicking off in a little over one week, interesting trademark filing details for “realityOS,” the name for Apple’s upcoming AR/VR headset operating system, have been resurfaced online, offering a clue as to what Apple may have in store to share at this year’s conference. The two separate trademark filings (1, 2) were resurfaced by Parker Ortolani on Twitter, who notes that while …

    iPhone 14 Pro and Redesigned MacBook Air Reportedly Stuck Using Technology Behind A15 Chip

    The iPhone 14 Pro’s “A16” chip may be a minor upgrade over the iPhone 13’s A15 Bionic and there are growing questions around the nature of the “M2” chip, according to reputable Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo. Earlier this week, the leaker known as “ShrimpApplePro” postulated that the A16 chip for the iPhone 14 Pro models will be manufactured with the same process as the iPhone 13’s A15 Bionic,…

    Top Stories: WWDC 2022 Schedule, New Apple Watch Pride Bands, and More

    It’s Memorial Day weekend in the United States, and that means WWDC is right around the corner and anticipation is building for what we might see at the opening keynote. Software updates are a given, but will we see any new hardware? Other news this week included the annual release of new Pride-themed Apple Watch bands, iPhone 14 Pro rumors, and Sony’s latest headphones that compete against…

    iPhone 14 Pro Rumored to Feature Always-On Display Mode

    The iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max may feature an always-on display mode for the Lock Screen, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reports. In his latest “Power On” newsletter, Gurman outlined some of the changes set to come to iOS 16, iPadOS 16, watchOS 9, tvOS 16, and macOS 13 at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) this year. Among the new capabilities rumored for iOS 16 is an enhanced…

    macOS 13: What We Know So Far

    The Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC), Apple’s annual developer and software-oriented conference, is now a week away. We’ve heard very little about macOS 13 ahead of its announcement this year, so we could be in for some major surprises when June 6 rolls around. Here’s what we know so far about the next version of Apple’s Mac operating system. macOS 13 Name? Every year heading into…



    Source link

    Previous articleCrypto Market Wrap: Bitcoin drifts lower, altcoins mixed
    Next articleCrypto starts June in a slump and the latest on El Salvador’s bitcoin experiment: CNBC Crypto World