Rich-poor gap shows up in smartphone sales as well | Mint – Mint

Open Access Now 2022-09-09

Other high-value categories, including cars, have shown a similar trend NEW DELHI : The affordable smartphone segment is shrinking because of inflation, high input costs and parts shortages, even as the premium phone market expands, indicating that spending by wealthier Indians is roaring even as their poorer counterparts cut back. “There is a decline in entry tier due to supply issues as well as softening of consumer demand due to inflation and rising prices of devices that brands are passing on to consumers due to rising input costs,” said Prachir Singh, a senior research analyst at Counterpoint Research. It’s not just smartphones. Other high-value categories, including cars, have shown a similar trend. One reason for this could be that wealthy Indians are more immune to challenges such as inflation, which tend to hit the poor and middle class, who spend a lot more of earnings on food and essentials. “This is unusual, but like other categories in India lately, it is following the same trend. Luxury goods are selling well, while entry level demand is tapering. The rich are getting richer, while mid and poor are in distress,” said Navkendar Singh, associate vice-president of devices research, IDC India, South Asia and ANZ. You might also like How Sapient Wealth’s Amit Bivalkar aced 14% returns How NBFCs are wooing students heading abroad What can put IRCTC stock on growth path In the car market, for instance, sales of pricier cars have far outpaced the growth in cheaper ones amid an increase in borrowing rates and higher prices. According to a Crisil report, sales of cars priced 10 lakh and above grew 38% in FY22 against a modest 7% growth in small cars for the same duration. Likewise, sales of premium smartphones—those that cost more than 40,000—have surged 83% in the June quarter from a year ago, while the market share of affordable and entry-level segments—under 8,000—declined by five percentage points, down to 17% from a year ago, according to IDC. Overall sales fell 1% in the first half of the year versus last year, with expectations of no growth in the remaining half of the year, according to IDC. “Ideally, all segments should de-grow if the market is shrinking and vice versa, but what we’re seeing now is an unusual trend,” Counterpoint’s Singh said. The researcher said the market shrank 5% sequentially due to inflationary headwinds. According to industry executives, demand for entry-level and affordable segments, typically under 10,000, has fallen by nearly a fourth. Consumer products such as fast-moving consumer goods and electronics goods becoming pricier than the year before, besides far higher fuel prices compared to last year, have resulted in rising living costs for customers across the board. “We’ve seen demand in the affordable segment drop by 25% in the mobile phone space. That is why companies are sitting on inventory pile-ups,” said Vikas Jain, co-founder of Micromax, who has now ventured into connected devices under the World of Play brand. Brands typically resort to discounting existing models in case of inventory pile-ups to make way for newer models, especially during this period when production is ramped up to meet festive season demand, which begins post-August. However, with consumers tightening purse strings, discounting on online and offline platforms is expected to be far higher than seen in previous years. “They (brands) will have to clear inventories, so there’s bound to be heavy discounting in prices to bring back the (consumer) demand,” Jain added. Elsewhere in Mint In Opinion, Himanshu argues our problem is fiscal mismanagement and not freebies. Patriotism happened only to men who were long gone, writes Manu Joseph, and explains what made us patriotic. How good are BSNL’s chances of turning around? Vivek Kaul answers the question in Long Story.  Download the Mint app and read premium stories Log in to our website to save your bookmarks. It’ll just take a moment. You are just one step away from creating your watchlist! Oops! Looks like you have exceeded the limit to bookmark the image. Remove some to bookmark this image. Your session has expired, please login again. You are now subscribed to our newsletters. In case you can’t find any email from our side, please check the spam folder. This is a subscriber only feature Subscribe Now to get daily updates on WhatsApp

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