A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Mar 5, 2018

Refurbished Older Phones Are Cannibalizing New Phone Sales

OK, not that old. But price increases and limited performance enhancements are causing sales of new smartphones to stall.

And the market increasingly tracks the saturated auto industry, with sales or leases of older models offering a solution to those balking at paying new model prices. JL

Timothy Martin and Drew Fitzgerald report in the Wall Street Journal:

"Smartphones resemble the car industry. I still want to drive a Mercedes, but I'll wait to buy the older model." Refurbished phones represent the fastest-growing segment of the global smartphone industry, accounting for one out of every 10 devices sold. A quarter of U.S. consumers sold their smartphones after upgrading to a new device in 2017. Steep prices for new phones are a significant reason for the refurbished industry's growth. "I don't feel like I'm missing out. I don't need any more phone than I got."
The smartphone industry has a culprit to blame for slumping sales: Its old devices remain too popular.
Flashy phones of yesteryear, particularly Apple Inc.'s iPhones and Samsung Electronics Co.'s Galaxy S handsets, are getting refurbished, and U.S. consumers are snapping them up. Many shoppers are balking at price tags for new phones pushing $1,000, and improvements on latest launches in many cases haven't impressed.
As more people hold on to devices longer, new smartphone shipments plunged to historic lows at the end of 2017.
"Smartphones now resemble the car industry very closely," said Sean Cleland, director of mobile at B-Stock Solutions Inc., the world's largest platform for trade-in and overstock phones, based in Redwood City, Calif. "I still want to drive a Mercedes, but I'll wait a couple of years to buy the older model. Same mentality."
Another trend borrowed from the car industry that has helped consumers get around sticker shock: leasing. Instead of buying new phones, Sprint Corp. and T-Mobile US Inc. allow subscribers to effectively lease them, allowing them to trade up for the latest device. That option, though, hasn't yet gone mainstream.
Refurbished phones represent the fastest-growing segment of the global smartphone industry, accounting for nearly one out of every 10 devices sold, according to Counterpoint Technology Market Research, which tracks device sales. Overall smartphone shipments hit 1.6 billion last year, Counterpoint says.
These older phones, which can sell for several hundred dollars, sap some of the demand for brand-new devices, which deliver the biggest profits. A premium handset today is likely to have three, if not four, different owners before it eventually gets tossed, according to industry executives and re-sellers.
Second-hand phones long found their way to Africa, India and other developing markets. But now, U.S. buyers represent 93% of the purchases made at second-hand phone online auctions run by B-Stock, compared with an about-even split between the U.S. and the rest of the world in 2013.
Samsung and Apple together sell more than one out of every three phones globally and capture about 95% of the industry's profits.
U.S. consumers, spurred by two-year carrier contracts and phone subsidies, were upgrading every 23 months as recently as 2014, according to BayStreet Research LLC, which tracks device sales. Now, people are holding onto their phones for an extra eight months. By next year, the time gap is estimated to widen to 33 months, BayStreet says.
Device makers don't lose out completely when older phones pass through several hands: For Apple, more iPhone users from the price-conscious crowd translates into more revenue for its fast-growing services arm, including the App Store and its music and payment services.
Apple has faced U.S. and European government investigations in recent months over the slowed performance of older iPhones. The company has repeatedly said it would never intentionally shorten battery life or degrade their devices' user experience. It has since slashed replacement-battery prices.
Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook, during an earnings call on Feb. 1, said the secondary market has expanded in recent years and that the iPhone's reliability has generally been "fantastic."
In a recent interview, D.J. Koh, Samsung's mobile chief, said the growing popularity of second-hand phones has Samsung rethinking whether to adjust its broad portfolio strategy. Though nothing has been decided, Samsung in certain markets is weighing whether to push refurbished flagship devices more aggressively over new releases of lower-cost phones, Mr. Koh said.
A quarter of U.S. consumers sold their smartphones after upgrading to a new device in 2017, the highest rate in the world, according to Deloitte.
That has created ample supply for consumers like Alan Earl, a 40-year-old digital marketer from Phoenix. He recently bought himself a refurbished iPhone 6S for $350, even though he gets new iPhones for his two children and wife when they are due for upgrades. He didn't care for the iPhone X's edge-to-edge display and wasn't interested in its facial recognition features.
Mr. Earl said he just needs his phone to text, call, check social media and listen to music. "I don't feel like I'm missing out," he said. "I don't need any more phone than what I got."
Steep prices for new phones are a significant reason for the refurbished industry's growth, said Remon Gazal, chief commercial officer at wireless distributor Brightstar Corp., which specializes in trade-in distribution. "Now, my phone costs more than my laptop," Mr. Gazal said.
Smartphones had roaring double-digit growth until the past two years. In 2017, new smartphone shipments rose just 2.7%, according to Gartner Inc., a market researcher. In the final three months, shipments declined for the first time in the industry's history.
Phone makers had banked they could compensate for slowing volume by pushing up prices. But customers balked.
"It's the worst case scenario now," said CK Lu, a Gartner research director. "Now the phones are maybe too expensive."

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