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Global smartphone shipments in second quarter hit lowest in 13 years on memory chip crunch

By Thomson Reuters Jul 13, 2026 | 7:49 AM

July 13 (Reuters) – Global smartphone shipments fell 11% in the second quarter to their lowest level for the period since ​2013, as a prolonged memory chip ‌shortage drove up handset prices and dampened demand, according to early estimates from Counterpoint Research.

Apple bucked the trend with a 3% rise in shipments, taking ‌its ​global market share to a ⁠record 20% in ⁠the quarter on resilient demand for its premium iPhone lineup and keeping prices unchanged. However, analysts expect price increases in the ​coming months.

Here are more details:

• Memory prices extended their climb as suppliers prioritized AI ⁠data center customers over ⁠consumer electronics, forcing manufacturers to pass ​higher component costs on to consumers through price ​hikes, particularly for entry- and mid-range devices.

• ‌Samsung reclaimed the top spot with a 24% share, benefiting from strong sales of its flagship Galaxy S26 series, better product ⁠availability and fewer price increases in markets such as India and the Middle East.

• Xiaomi, Oppo and ⁠Vivo posted ‌the steepest shipment declines among ⁠the top five smartphone makers, reflecting ​their ‌greater exposure to entry- and mid-range ​devices.

• Counterpoint ⁠maintained expectations of global smartphone shipments declining about 14% this year and said the memory shortage is likely to persist into 2027.

(Reporting by Harshita Mary Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Sriraj Kalluvila)