Apple iPhone sales up in Japan

Published Nov 29, 2013

Share

Tokyo - Apple sold three of every four smartphones in Japan last month after the country’s largest carrier, NTT Docomo, began carrying the iPhone, according to a market researcher.

Apple, which released new iPhone 5S and 5C models in September, won 76 percent of Japanese smartphone sales last month, market researcher Kantar Worldpanel ComTech said on Thursday.

Apple’s share of smartphone sales at NTT Docomo was 61 percent after it began offering the iPhone for the first time, Kantar said in a post on its Twitter account, confirmed yesterday by Dominic Sunnebo, an analyst with the company in London.

Japan’s three wireless carriers all sell iPhones after NTT Docomo, the nation’s largest, ended its holdout against Apple’s handset as it attempts to regain market share from smaller rivals which already stock the devices. NTT Docomo had 45.7 percent of Japanese mobile subscribers in October compared with 29 percent for KDDI and 25.3 percent for SoftBank, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

NTT Docomo had resisted offering the iPhone to focus on handsets from Sony and Samsung Electronics and protect its online store, called dmarket, from competition with Apple’s iTunes.

Shares of NTT Docomo rose 1.1 percent to close at 1,650 yen in Tokyo. SoftBank fell 1.7 percent to 8,290 yen and KDDI dropped 2 percent to 6,430 yen. The Topix index declined 0.2 percent.

“It is true that iPhone sold well,” Jun Ootori, a spokesman for NTT Docomo in Tokyo said on Thursday. He declined to comment further because the company doesn’t know details of Kantar’s research.

Apple introduced two new iPhones, including a cheaper version in bright colours and an updated high-end device that NTT Docomo began selling in Japan on September 20. - Bloomberg

Related Topics: