Skip to main content

China to leapfrog the U.S. in mobile phone revenue, according to report

chinese authorities will make things tough china foreign smartphone companies mobile market
Image used with permission by copyright holder

According to a report by predictive analysis firm Strategy Analytics, Chinese consumers will spend more than $87 billion on mobile phones this year. The firm predicts that U.S. consumers, by comparison, will spend $60 billion, which makes China poised to overtake the U.S. to become the world’s largest mobile phone market, as reported by the Wall Street Journal.

According to Strategy Analytics senior analyst Woody Oh, China’s shift to 3G and 4G smartphones will help mobile phone sales rise 15 percent to 430 million units in 2014. This rise is aided by Samsung’s, Huawei’s and Lenovo’s expansions across China in order to meet demand. In addition, the increase is aided by the decrease in the low tier market and increase in other higher-price segments.

Strategy Analytics executive director Neil Mawston isn’t very concerned about the U.S. market, however.

“High average selling prices for mobile phones and huge operator subsidies from Sprint and others continue to make the U.S. a very profitable market for major device brand such as Apple, Samsung and Alcatel,” said Mawston. On the other hand, the firm predicts U.S. mobile phone sales will stagnate at 163 million units, with revenues rising just 4 percent.

Strategy Analytics also points out that smartphone penetration in mature markets will saturate, with emerging economies such as Brazil, Russia, India, and China witnessing growing revenue rates above the global average. According to the firm, those countries will compose over a third of global handset revenue in 2014.

(Image courtesy of Vepar5/Shutterstock)

Editors' Recommendations

Williams Pelegrin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Williams is an avid New York Yankees fan, speaks Spanish, resides in Colorado, and has an affinity for Frosted Flakes. Send…
The U.S. government is now using AirTag trackers to spy on packages
Person holding an Apple AirTag.

Apple raised some eyebrows late last year when the company revealed that it actively works with law enforcement officials in cases involving the misuse of its object tracker. The admission came after a litany of cases where AirTag trackers were exploited for stalking and theft. Apple even got slapped with a lawsuit for the whole drama. But it appears that other government agencies have also grown a taste for deploying AirTag trackers to assist with their investigations.

According to Forbes, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) recently used an AirTag for surveillance in a case that potentially had an illicit narcotics manufacturing angle. Citing an official search warrant, the report notes that border agents intercepted a package coming in from China that contained a pill press machine used to turn chemical powders into a pill.

Read more
The Nothing Phone 2 is real, and it’s coming to the U.S. this year
Nothing Phone 1 Glyph Interface lights.

The Nothing Phone 2 will be coming to the U.S. this year, CEO Carl Pei said today. The company previously launched its first entry into the smartphone market in Europe and Asia due to resource constraints.

“We decided to make the U.S. our No. 1 priority in terms of markets,” CEO Carl Pei said in an interview with Inverse. “We couldn't do it earlier because we were only in our second year and our hands were tied building the team as we were building the products. Now as we're on a more solid footing, we can take a step forward.”

Read more
The Nothing Phone 1 has finally launched in the U.S. — kind of
The Nothing Phone 1's camera module.

The Nothing Phone 1 launched globally last year with vague promises of a future U.S. release, but now Nothing fans don't have to wait any longer for the smartphone to make its way stateside. Soft-launching through a "Beta Membership," the Nothing Phone 1 is finally available for Americans who are willing to be a part of Nothing's test program before it officially launches with retailers later in 2023.

While it's certainly exciting for the Nothing Phone 1 to be making its way to the U.S., the release and branding of the membership program are a little odd. It gives fans the opportunity to try out the phone and test Nothing OS 1.5, which is based on Android 13 and represents a major update from Nothing OS 1.0's Android 12 foundation. If you want in, you need to pay $299.

Read more