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Wearable devices shipments rise 27.2% on year in 4Q20, says IDC

Joseph Tsai, DIGITIMES, Taipei 0

Worldwide shipments of wearable devices reached 153.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2020, an on-year increase of 27.2%, according to IDC.

Shipments for the full year grew 28.4% to 444.7 million units. While the holiday quarter was largely driven by new devices and lower prices, the broader trend for 2020 was the surge in consumer spending for electronics as disposable income was reallocated from leisure activities during the pandemic.

"While the shift in spending along with new products and typical seasonality were at play during the fourth quarter, the pandemic has also been good for the market as it has put health and fitness at the forefront of many consumers' minds," said Jitesh Ubrani, research manager for IDC Mobile Device Trackers. "In-home fitness programs are quickly becoming a crucial component of the wearables offering for many companies. Beyond that, the proliferation of health sensors such as skin temperature, ECG, and heart rate tracking are allowing users and health professionals to better understand the onset and tracking of diseases."

However, growth has not been even across the wearables market as some companies and products were affected by the global semiconductor shortage. Most notably, wristbands declined 17.8% during the quarter and accounted for just 11.5% of all wearable devices shipped. Hearables were the largest category of devices with 64.2% share of shipments, followed by watches with 24.1% share.

"2020 was the year that hearables became the must-have device," said Ramon Llamas, research director for IDC's Wearables Team. "Hearables provided a new degree of privacy, particularly during home quarantine but also while out in public. Meeting that demand was a long list of vendors with an equally long list of devices, spanning the range of feature sets and price points. Underpinning the hearables market was a constantly shifting competitive landscape, with companies slowly gaining a foothold in the market (Amazon and its Echo Buds and Frames), vendors introducing new form factors (Apple and AirPods Max), and new features making their way down the price curve, including automatic noise cancelling and voice assistant capability."

Company highlights

Apple led the market once again with 36.2% share of fourth-quarter 2020 shipments. Its Watch shipments rose 45.6% thanks to the appeal of three models with different price points (Series 6, Watch SE and Series 3). Hearables shipments also surged during the quarter although year-over-year growth slowed to 22%, down from 28% and 29% in the previous two quarters. The slowing growth reflected the huge amount of adoption that the market has seen in recent quarters.

Xiaomi ended the quarter in the second position, growing 5% year over year. However, the company's shipments of its popular Mi Band lineup declined 18.3% during the supply-challenged quarter. Driving overall growth was the expansion of the hearables line, which grew 55.5% since last year and is largely focused on China and the rest of Asia Pacific. Looking ahead, the company is well positioned to gain from Huawei's declines as well as grow in EMEA thanks to its push in the smartphone industry.

Samsung held the third position with growth coming from its hearables business as the company shipped 8.8 million units across its various brands. Samsung's low-cost wristbands also saw greater traction and were able to compete with the Chinese vendors in a few markets although overall volume for these devices was relatively low at 1.3 million units. Overall watch shipments declined to 2.9 million in the fourth quarter of 2020.

Huawei fell to fourth place in the fourth quarter of 2020 and continued to struggle with the sanctions imposed by the US government. While its shipments within China grew 9.4% year over year, shipments declined in previously strong markets such as Asia Pacific (excluding Japan and China), the Middle East and Africa, and Western Europe.

The company has slowly started to move away from wristbands and towards watches as exhibited by the 18.2% growth in watch shipments and the 33.7% decline in wristbands. Watches also command a higher average selling price (ASP) and enabled the company to get closer to developers with its homegrown HarmonyOS, which is expected to tie in with smartwatches in the future.

BoAt rounded out the top-5 with 5.4 million units shipped in the fourth quarter of 2020. However, the company is solely operating in India and almost exclusively focuses on the hearables segment.

IDC: Top-5 wearable device companies by shipments, 4Q20 (m units)

Company

4Q20 shipments

4Q20 market share

4Q19 shipments

4Q19 market share

Y/Y

1. Apple

55.6

36.2%

43.7

36.2%

27.2%

2. Xiaomi

13.5

8.8%

12.8

10.6%

5%

3. Samsung

13

8.5%

10.8

9%

20.5%

4. Huawei

10.2

6.7%

9.5

7.9%

7.6%

5. BoAt

5.4

3.5%

0.9

0.8%

470.1%

Others

55.8

36.4%

42.9

35.6%

30%

Total

153.5

100%

120.7

100%

27.2%

Source: IDC, compiled by Digitimes, March 2021

IDC: Top-5 wearable device companies by shipments, 2020 (m units)

Company

2020 shipments

2020 market share

2019 shipments

2019 market share

Y/Y

Apple

151.4

34.1%

111.5

32.2%

35.9%

Xiaomi

50.7

11.4%

41.7

12%

21.7%

Huawei

43.5

9.8%

28.9

8.3%

50.7%

Samsung

40

9%

31.4

9.1%

27.3%

Fitbit

12.9

2.9%

15.9

4.6%

(18.8%)

Others

146.1

32.9%

117.1

33.8%

24.7%

Total

444.7

100%

346.4

100%

28.4%

Source: IDC, compiled by Digitimes, March 2021