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SEATTLE (11/14/2008) - Handset makers collectively will sell fewer mobile phones in 2009 than this year, and sales for 2008
will be lower than previously expected, Nokia warned on Friday.
However, Nokia doesn't expect smartphones to be particularly hard hit.
The world's largest cell phone maker said that it now expects that total mobile phone sales across the market for 2008 will
be 1.24 billion, instead of its earlier estimate of 1.26 billion. The total is still better than 2007, when 1.14 billion phones
were sold. While Nokia didn't give a figure for how many phones it expects to sell next year, it did say that the total will
probably be lower than this year.
Nokia does not typically give specific expectations for its own sales, rather it predicts industry volume and its own market
share. For the fourth quarter, Nokia expects its market share to be the same as the third quarter, when it had 38 percent
of the market, or slightly up.
Despite the overall slowdown, no one particular type of phone will be especially hard hit, said Rick Simonson, Nokia's chief
financial officer in a conference call Friday morning to discuss the revised outlook. "I don't think it's about disproportion.
The volume impact is primarily in the mass market but people still desire smartphones and they will continue to. It is a growing
part of the market so where we see devices that really do add something different and add value, people still have a lot of
demand for that," he said.
Nokia's high-end E series phones, for example, are doing well, particularly the E71, he said. The company intends to continue
to add new types of smartphones and if the rest of the industry does as well, smartphones should continue to be a growing
part of the market even in a down year, he said.
The worldwide economic slowdown is to blame for the expected drop in sales, Nokia said. The mobile device market is also impacted
by the limited availability of credit, which has affected the purchasing ability of some of Nokia's customers, the company
said.
The announcement comes just about a month after Nokia's third quarter earnings report, when it made its original prediction
of sales for 2008. At the time, its expectation of 1.26 billion handsets sold for the year was in line with predictions made
by analysts at IDC. Nokia's decision to downgrade that expectation just a month later reflects a probable sharp drop off of
sales over the past couple of months and portends grim fourth quarter reports from handset makers.
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