After a tentative rebound, the smartphone market faces its darkest hour. Counterpoint Research forecasts a massive 12.4% year-on-year shipment decline in 2026—the largest ever—driven by acute memory supply disruptions and escalating costs.
2025 closed on a high note, with Q4 shipments up 3.8%, fueled by macroeconomic tailwinds and festive buying. This extended a four-quarter uptrend and delivered the best holiday quarter since 2021, with gains across regions save China and Eastern Europe.
Storm clouds gathered quickly. Structural weaknesses in low-end OEMs, combined with memory scarcity and component inflation, threaten prolonged pain. Recovery might not arrive until late 2027, when new capacity eases the bottleneck.
Principal Analyst Yang Wang warns of outsized impact on entry-level devices. ‘LPDDR4 supply is vanishing rapidly, forcing OEMs to delay launches, shrink lineups, alter specs, and bump prices—evident in January 2026’s 10-20% hikes for some Android portfolios.’
The crisis stems from wafer capacity shifts toward lucrative AI-focused DRAM and enterprise NAND SSDs, sidelining mobile memory. Premium tiers offer a silver lining: Apple and Samsung, with resilient chains and premium focus, could post single-digit growth. Meanwhile, sub-$200 phones risk 20%+ contraction.
This downturn underscores the fragility of global tech supply. As manufacturers pivot, consumers in emerging markets may feel the pinch most acutely, prompting a potential surge in premium adoption.