Mobile Phone Sales In 2012 Actually Fell, Due To Stiff Smartphone Competition And A Bad Economy

Everybody Has One, But Fewer Are Buying Them
TO GO WITH AFP STORY BY SANDRA LACUT - Romanian model Ioana Timoce looks at her mobile phone in the appartment rented by her agency for the fashion week on January 16, 2013 in Paris. Ioana Timoce works with the agency H Model Management for the fashion week in Paris. AFP PHOTO / LIONEL BONAVENTURE (Photo credit should read LIONEL BONAVENTURE/AFP/Getty Images)
TO GO WITH AFP STORY BY SANDRA LACUT - Romanian model Ioana Timoce looks at her mobile phone in the appartment rented by her agency for the fashion week on January 16, 2013 in Paris. Ioana Timoce works with the agency H Model Management for the fashion week in Paris. AFP PHOTO / LIONEL BONAVENTURE (Photo credit should read LIONEL BONAVENTURE/AFP/Getty Images)

LONDON, Feb 13 (Reuters) - Sales of mobile phones around the world fell last year for the first time since 2009 as consumers shunned cheaper feature phones, research company Gartner said on Wednesday.

"Tough economic conditions, shifting consumer preferences, and intense market competition weakened the worldwide mobile phone market," Gartner analyst Anshul Gupta said on Wednesday.

Smartphone sales, a category dominated by Samsung and Apple, continued to rise, he said, and the higher-end devices would account for more than half the market for the first time this year.

Total worldwide mobile sales to end users fell 1.7 percent to 1.75 billion units in 2012, Gartner said. Samsung and Apple continued to dominate the market, with the Korean company selling 385 million phones in 2012, of which 53.5 percent were smartphones, with Apple selling 130 million smartphones.

In the fourth quarter alone, Apple and Samsung accounted for 52 percent of smartphone sales, up from 46 percent in the third quarter.

Chinese company Huawei reached third spot in worldwide smartphone sales for the first time in the fourth quarter, Gartner said. It sold 27.2 million smartphones to end users in 2012, up 74 percent.

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