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IDC: Tablet shipments decline for third quarter in a row, leaders Apple and Samsung lose market share again

iPad Air
Image Credit: John Koetsier

The tablet market continues to contract, a decline that first began in Q4 2014. In fact, Q2 2015 is the third straight quarter in a row to see a decrease year-over-year: 44.7 million units shipped worldwide, down 7.0 percent from the 48.0 million units that shipped the same quarter last year, according to market research firm IDC.

The top three tablet makers maintained their positions: Apple was first, Samsung took second, and Lenovo settled for third. IDC blamed “little hardware innovation and limited vendor portfolio updates” for the overall market decline quarter-over-quarter (3.9 percent). The top five vendors accounted for 54 percent of the market, down from 58 percent last quarter:

idc_tablets_q2_2015

Both Apple and Samsung saw their respective numbers fall as competitors swooped in to pick up the scraps. Apple dropped 3.2 points to 24.5 percent market share, meaning it grabbed less than a quarter of all tablets this past quarter thanks to shipping fewer units. Samsung slipped 1.0 point to 17.0 percent, and it also shipped fewer units. Because of the smaller drop for Samsung, the gap between the South Korean company and the U.S. company continued to shrink.

“Beyond the decline, we’re seeing a profound shift in the vendor landscape as the top two vendors, Apple and Samsung, lose share in the overall market,” Jean Philippe Bouchard, IDC’s research director for tablets, said in a statement. “In the first quarter of the year, Apple and Samsung accounted for 45 percent of the market and this quarter, with the growth of vendors like LG, Huawei, and E FUN, their combined share dropped to 41 percent.”

Lenovo managed to gain 0.6 points and hit 5.7 percent market share. Huawei and LG gained 0.8 and 1.1 points respectively, both hitting 1.6 percent of tablet shipments. In fact, Huawei entered the top five ranking for the first time.

As before, IDC attributes the tablet market’s decline to longer life cycles (at least when compared to smartphones) and increased competition from other devices, including phablets. The hope is that new Windows 10 devices may be able to rebuild momentum.

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