The company overtook Samsung as the world's top smartphone vendor in the final three months of 2016, according to Strategy Analytics. The iPhone maker captured 18 percent of the global market in the December quarter, said the firm.
Apple on Tuesday reported it sold 78.3 million iPhones in the fourth quarter, snapping a three-quarter streak of iPhone unit sales declines.
The results, fueled by sales of the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, pushed
Apple to its highest-quarter revenue and per-share earnings ever.
Samsung, which faced a massive Note 7 recall due to faulty batteries,
dropped to second place, said Strategy Analytics. Samsung shipped 77.5
million smartphones worldwide during the fourth quarter, according to
the firm, a 5 percent drop from the 81.3 million phones it shipped in
the final three months of 2015.
"This was the iPhone's best
performance for over a year, as Apple capitalized on Samsung's recent
missteps," Neil Mawston, executive director at Strategy Analytics, said
in a statement. "Samsung will be banking on the rumored Galaxy S8 model
in a few weeks' time to reignite growth and return to the top spot in
quarterly smartphone shipments."
Overall, global smartphone
shipments grew 3 percent to hit 1.5 billion units in 2016. Rounding out
the top five phone vendors for the fourth quarter were Huawei, OPPO and
Vivo. The global smartphone market, which has been sluggish in recent years, recovered some due to stronger demand in developing markets like China and Africa, said the firm.
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