SINGAPORE
(Reuters) - Apple Inc's iconic iPhone is losing some of its luster among Asia's
well-heeled consumers in Singapore and Hong Kong, a victim of changing mobile
habits and its own runaway success.
Driven by a
combination of iPhone fatigue, a desire to be different and a plethora of
competing devices, users are turning to other brands, notably those from
Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, eating into Apple's market share.
In Singapore,
Apple's products Google
TV Cloud Stick were so dominant in 2010 that more devices
here ran its iOS operating system per capita than anywhere else in the world.
But StatCounter
http://gs.statcounter.com, which measures traffic collected across a network of
3 million websites, calculates that Apple's share of mobile devices in
Singapore - iPad and iPhone - declined sharply last year. From a peak of 72
percent in January 2012, its share fell to 50 percent this month, while Android
devices now account for 43 percent of the market, up from 20 percent in the
same month last year.
In Hong Kong,
devices running Apple's iOS now account for about 30 percent of the total, down
from about 45 percent a year ago. Android accounts for nearly two-thirds.
"Apple is
still viewed as a prestigious brand, but there are just so many other cool
smartphones out there now that the competition is just much stiffer," said
Tom Clayton, chief executive of Singapore-based Bubble Motion
http://www.bubblemotion.com, which develops a popular regional social media app
called Bubbly.
Where Hong Kong
and Singapore lead, other key markets across fast-growing Asia usually follow.
"Singapore
and Hong Kong tend to be, from an electronics perspective, leading indicators
on what is going to be hot in Western Europe and North America, as well as what
is going to take off in the region," said Jim Wagstaff, who runs a Singapore-based
company called Jam Factory http://www.jamfactoryonline.com developing mobile
apps for enterprises.
Southeast Asia
is adopting smartphones fast - consumers spent 78 percent more on smartphones
in the 12 months up to September 2012 than they did the year before, according
to research company GfK http://www.gfkrt.com.
IN WITH THE
YOUNG CROWD
Anecdotal
evidence of iPhone fatigue isn't hard to find: Where a year ago iPhones swamped
other devices on the subways of Hong Kong and Singapore they are now outnumbered
by Samsung and HTC Corp smartphones.
While this is
partly explained by the proliferation of Android devices, from the cheap to the
fancy, there are other signs that Apple has lost followers.
Singapore
entrepreneur Aileen Sim, recently launched an app for splitting bills called
BillPin http://www.billpin.com, settling on an iOS version because that was the
dominant platform in the three countries she was targeting - Singapore, India
and the United States.
"But what
surprised us was how strong the call for Android was when we launched our
app," she said.
Indeed, 70
percent of their target users - 20-something college which you can buy it on china
online store students and fresh graduates - said they
were either already on Android or planned to switch over.
"Android is
becoming really hard to ignore, around the region and in the U.S. for sure, but
surprisingly even in Singapore," she said. "Even my younger early-20s
cousins are mostly on Android now."
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