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Samsung leads in global smartphone sales as market bounces back after two years of stagnation

Pascal Oparada

All is not lost for smartphone manufacturers. On the heels of two years of global stagnation, the category is finally showing some signs of life. Much of the bounce-back comes as manufacturers are working to correct for dulled consumer interest.

I wouldn’t put too much weight in the numbers right now, as they’re little more than an uptick. Numbers from Canalys put shipment growth at one per cent from Q3 2018 to Q3 2019. In most cases, that would be a modest gain, at best, but this is notably the first time in two years that the numbers have been heading in the right direction.

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Samsung saw the biggest gains, a phenomenon the analyst firm chalks up to a shift in strategy to eat some of its profits. The move has paid off for the quarter, with an 11% growth in device shipments to 78.9 million devices shipped. That gives the company the largest global market share at 22.4%.

Despite China-U.S. trade war, Huawei, too, saw impressive growth, year-over-year, commanding second place with 66.8 million units shipped. Much of its growth came from China, which has ramped up spending on the company’s products as it has run into regulatory scrutiny overseas. Resumption of sales in some international markets helped propel growth as well. Of the top three, Apple continued to struggle the most, with a 7% loss from 2018.

Analysts say for now, at least, none of these numbers qualifies as full turn around for a stagnant category, though the upcoming rollout of 5G coverage could help numbers in the right direction in the coming year.

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