Sun, May 27, 2012, 1:15 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed

How consumer-electronics makers are faring

A look at how selected makers of phones and other consumer-electronic gadgets are faring

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A look at how selected makers of phones and other consumer-electronic gadgets are faring:

April 19: Microsoft Corp. says it shipped 1.4 million Xbox 360 consoles during the first three months of the year, about half of the 2.7 million shipped a year earlier.

Nokia Corp. says sales of smartphones dropped to 12 million in the first quarter, from 24 million a year earlier, while volume sales of cellphones fell to 83 million from 108 million a year earlier.

April 24: Apple Inc. says it sold 35 million iPhones in the quarter, almost twice as many as it sold a year ago and above analyst expectations. IPad sales came in below analyst expectations, at 11.8 million units. But that was still two and a half times as many as it sold in the same quarter a year ago. Mac sales were also slightly below expectations, at 4 million. That was 7 percent more than a year ago. Apple sold 7.7 million iPods, down 15 percent from a year earlier.

AT&T Inc. says it activated 4.3 million iPhones in the first quarter. That was down from 7.6 million in the fourth quarter, when AT&T began selling the iPhone 4S. However, the number was still up from the 3.6 million iPhones AT&T sold in the same quarter a year ago.

HTC Corp. reports a drop in first-quarter earnings and revenue as it faces competition from Apple and Samsung, but it expects revenue to rise in the current quarter with its "HTC One" series phone that offers users a better camera and music experience in addition to a sleek design. HTC says its biggest challenges had been the iPhone 4S's launch late last year. It expects to win back some of the U.S. market and expand its markets in Europe and Asia. HTC doesn't disclose the number of devices it sold, citing competitive reasons.

April 25: TomTom says it sold 1.4 million personal-navigation devices in North America, down from 2.1 million a year ago. In Europe, it sold 2 million, down from 2.4 million. TomTom says overall market share was relatively flat at 46 percent in Europe and 24 percent in North America.

April 26: Nintendo Co. says it sold 9.8 million Wii machines over the fiscal year that just ended, fewer than the 15 million it had sold the previous fiscal year, and below its initial hopes of selling 13 million machines. It remained optimistic for the fiscal year through March 2013, and forecast sales of 10.5 million Wii machines. The Wii U, which will have a touch-screen controller, comes out this year.

April 27: Samsung Electronics Co., maker of the Galaxy line of phones and tablet computers, doesn't disclose the number of smartphones it sells. It reports significant sales growth of high-end smartphones in developing markets including China, a key battlefield for mobile phone makers. It got more than 70 percent of its operating profit from mobile businesses in the first quarter.

May 2: Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. says it shipped 8.9 million mobile devices in the first quarter, including 5.1 million smartphones. A year ago, it shipped 9.3 million mobile devices, including 4.1 million smartphones

May 3: Garmin Ltd. says it sold 2.7 million units in the first quarter, up 7 percent from a year earlier. It also says it has sold more than 100 million devices since its founding in 1989, after hitting 1 million in 1997 and 25 million in 2007.

May 10: Sony Corp. says it sold 1.9 million PlayStation 3 units, down slightly from 2.1 million a year earlier. Sales of the PlayStation Portable declined to 900,000, from 1.7 million a year earlier.

Wednesday: Hewlett-Packard Co. says unit shipments in its PC division fell 1 percent, but the decline was offset by an increase in average selling price.

Lenovo Group Ltd. says PC shipments grew 44 percent in the latest quarter. Shipments in China grew about 23 percent, while other emerging markets saw 50 percent growth and mature markets had an 81 percent increase in the quarter.

Coming up:

June 28: Research in Motion Ltd.

 

7 comments

  • russell Lee  •  Honolulu, Hawaii  •  1 month 28 days ago
    New IPAD-3 is MADE by SAMSUNG!
    Apple was buying a iPad 3 from Samsung then just putting their logo on.

    "Samsung currently is the sole vendor of the display for the 9.7-inch iPad 3 device."
    -----------
    Samsung Supplies Apple With Touch Screen for New IPad
    Mar 13, 2012 5:01 AM GMT-1000

    Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) will supply the touch screen for Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s new iPad after Sharp Corp. (6753) didn’t meet the U.S. company’s quality requirements, according to an analyst with iSuppli.

    Samsung, the world’s top flat-panel maker, currently is the sole vendor of the display for the 9.7-inch device, said Vinita Jakhanwal, a senior manager at iSuppli, a unit of Englewood, Colorado-based IHS Inc. The new tablet goes on sale March 16.

    The supply deal deepens Apple’s partnership with Samsung, which already makes the chips that power the iPhone and iPad.
  • James  •  Toronto, Canada  •  2 months ago
    Millions of people are ditching Rim. Organizations are ditching Rim.

    Siri and newer Android voice assistants like Pannous Jeannie are weaning people from the Blackberrys. QNX 2.0 should have been ditched just like the Palm webOS. Rim is on schedule for self-destruct.
    • killuminati87 18 days ago
      And RIM can't come up with their own assistant with BB10? Lot of people are looking for Blackberry to me-too iOS and Android, along with BB proprietary features other phone software makers overlook. If BB10 can do 90% of the things the other two major platforms do, and give developers an app friendly platform while keeping security and messaging in mind, I will be switching back to good ol' RIM.
  • beckyb  •  Dallas, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Correction: Microsoft does not make the XBox 360. It is like Walmart, it buys and then resells the XBox 360. Microsoft has never manufactured any hardware.
    • Pepe Pepe 3 months ago
      XBox 360 is manufactured by Foxconn .... just like products from Dell, HP and Apple. Just like the other companies, they contract out the manufacturing. So YES, they are the MAKERS of the XBox360.
    • krusty_kanuck 2 months ago
      All products on this list are made in China.
  • Dan  •  3 months ago
    YAY TRASH SAMSUNG, even though they sold the most smartphones in 2011 this article sure makes them look like losers!! Keke....YAY!!!!!
    • John C 3 months ago
      Samsung NEVER reports sales, only phones SHIPPED. No one ever really knows how many sales - unlike Nokia, Microsoft and Apple which report actual sales numbers.
    • Steelers 3 months ago
      Motorola doesn't report sales either but they showed the number shipped in this article. In all fairness, they should have shown Samsung's shipped numbers as well.
  • James  •  Toronto, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Apple iPhone growth comes entirely at Research In Motion's expense. Look for Research In Motion's March quarterly global sales of Blackberrys to be less than 4 million units. The global Research In Motion subscriber base would decline substantially as the number of Blackberry users decrease in time. There are no doubts.
    • deasys 3 months ago
      "Apple iPhone growth comes entirely at Research In Motion's expense." That's a bold statement! Since Apple DOUBLED its iPhone unit sales to 37 million last quarter, can you tell me the last time RIM *ever* sold 18 million phones in a quarter? No, I'm fairly sure Apple's iPhone growth is coming at the expense of just about EVERY cell phone competitor...
    • Gambrinus 3 months ago
      There was no mention of RIM in the article, James Apple. Got an obsession?
      Found a job yet?
    • krusty_kanuck 2 months ago
      My wife and some of her friends moved to the iPhone from the Droid ecosystem just because the rest of their friends have them.
  • One175  •  4 months ago
    The blackberry is the poor mens iphone.
    • Henry 3 Dogg 4 months ago
      Android is a poor man's iPhone.

      Blackberry is an case study in stupidity.
    • Pepe Pepe 3 months ago
      Henry 3 Dogg, not to disagree but Android is not only the poor man's iPhone, in many cases is ALSO a case study in human stupidity (ie: people getting cheap crapware then complaining about it not being like the iPhone).
    • James 3 months ago
      Android is far closer to the iPhone than the bungled BB Storm, BB Torch, etc. these vastly inferior iPhone clones from Research In Motion are the source of people's vain wishes that Blackberrys are poor men's iPhones. Can't say enough about how vain and stupid the Blackberry owners are.
  • Ryan  •  3 months ago
    I have a Blackberry because it's a company phone. I'm eligible for a new phone in March. I can't wait for an iPhone (albeit and older model). Blackberry was awesome at one point in time. Unfortunately for them, AAPL left them in the dust.
 
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