Tablet sales losing steam, survey shows

The adoption of large-screen smartphones or "phablets" is affecting the global sales of tablet computers.

Global sales of tablet computers are likely to slow this year, hurt in part by saturation and adoption of large-screen smartphones or "phablets," a market tracker says.

The research firm IDC says its updated forecast sees tablet sales up 12.1 per cent this year, after a 51.8 per cent expansion in 2013.

IDC said sales are likely to total around 245.4 million units this year.

"Two major issues are causing the tablet market to slow down. First, consumers are keeping their tablets, especially higher-cost models from major vendors, far longer than originally anticipated," said IDC analyst Tom Mainelli.

"And when they do buy a new one, they are often passing their existing tablet off to another member of the family."

The second factor is the rise of phablets - smartphones with 5.5-inch and larger screens, the analyst said.

The emergence of phablets is "causing many people to second-guess tablet purchases as the larger screens on these phones are often adequate for tasks once reserved for tablets."

In the past year, IDC said, the phablet share of smartphone shipments has more than doubled, from 4.3 per cent in the first quarter of 2013 to 10.5 per cent in early 2014.

IDC said consumers are now looking at tablets and related devices with larger screens like Microsoft's 12-inch Surface Pro 3.

"The shift back toward larger screens will mark a welcome sea change for most vendors as the average selling price for these devices will remain roughly 50 per cent higher than the average sub-8-inch device," said IDC's Jitesh Ubrani.

"Microsoft is also expected to benefit from this shift, as the share for Windows-based devices is expected to double between now and 2018."

A previous IDC report said sales of tablets including newly introduced convertible PCs totaled 50.4 million units in the first quarter of 2014.

That was just 3.9 per cent higher than the same period a year earlier, and down 35.7 per cent from the busy holiday season that included the fourth quarter of 2013.


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Source: AAP


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