As tablet sales take a dive, analysts expect smartphone vendors to launch convertibles

As tablet sales take a dive, analysts expect smartphone vendors to launch convertibles
whichisproImage: Gordon Mah Ung

The traditional tablet may not be dying, but it’s increasingly being relegated to the low end of the market, according to an IDC report released Thursday. Users are migrating toward convertibles instead, and the vendors are following.

IDC said worldwide tablet sales fell 14.7 percent to just 39.6 million units during the first quarter of 2016. Excluding some seasonal holiday upticks, tablet sales have generally declined from their all-time high in the fourth quarter of 2013, when worldwide sales reached 78.6 million units. 

IDC analyst Jitesh Ubrani said traditional slate tablets still dominate the market with 87.6 percent of all units sold. Increasingly, though, they’ve become “synonymous with the low end of the market,” IDC said in its report. The firm said it believes the market for iPads will continue, but only as replacements, not as new customers purchasing an iPad for the first time.

The story behind the story: Two trends seem to be emerging, IDC noted: First, premium tablets are evolving into detachables like the Microsoft Surface Pro 4 and Apple iPad Pro. Detachable sales climbed by triple-digit rates to 4.9 million units, IDC said. Second, the traditional tablet is heading down toward the low end of the market, where Asian smartphone vendors are applying their mobile acumen to this larger form factor. 

Expect smartphone vendors to dominate tablets

The latter trend explains the rise of Huawei, the only vendor in IDC’s top five that saw any positive growth. The company’s worldwide tablet shipments nearly doubled to 2.1 million during the first quarter. 

Apple, whose iPad shipments fell by 18.8 percent from last year, still ranks as the top tablet vendor, with 10.3 million units sold worldwide. Samsung ranks second, with 6 million units (sales fell 28 percent). Amazon was third with 2.2 million units, followed by Lenovo (2.2 million units) and Huawei (2.1 million units).

Another data point helps confirm that tablet vendors are driving down price: Separately, IDC reported Thursday that budget ARM vendor Mediatek became the preferred microprocessor vendor during the third quarter of 2015, bypassing Apple for the first time.

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Detachables may become the new laptops

Naturally, any vendor would prefer to sell a $1,299 Surface Pro 4 convertible rather than a $130 low-end Android tablet. In other words, consumers should expect Huawei and its competition to develop their own Surface clones, IDC said.

“The introduction of detachables from traditional smartphone vendors is only beginning,” Jean Philippe Bouchard, research director of tablets at IDC, said in a statement. Bouchard warned that the smartphone vendors’ mobile acumen would pose a real threat to traditional PC manufacturers. “Their understanding of the mobile ecosystem and the volume achieved on their smartphone product lines will allow them to aggressively compete for this new computing segment,” Bouchard said. He went on to predict tablet-smartphone pairings: “It is likely that those smartphone vendors will utilize the detachable segment to create new mobile computing end-user experiences if customers are using their detachables in combination with their smartphones.”

Apparently the future holds a healthy ecosystem of detachable hardware, one that’s already populated by the Apple iPad Pro and competitors, including the Surface Pro 4 and third-party hardware like the Lenovo MIIX 700. It seems poised to fill the void between PCs and smartphones. “Microsoft arguably created the market for detachable tablets with the launch of their Surface line of products,” Ubrani said. “With the PC industry in decline, the detachable market stands to benefit as consumers and enterprises seek to replace their aging PCs with detachables.”

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