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Apple again held the top spot in the wearables market during the second quarter of 2018, shipping 4.7 million Apple Watch units and holding a 17 percent share of the overall wearable market. The new data comes from IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Wearable Device Tracker, which states that the market as a whole was up 5.5 percent due to "gains in emerging markets."

Markets such as Asia Pacific, Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa, and Latin America grew 14 percent year-over-year because "basic wristbands" remain in high demand due to their low prices. On the other hand, more mature markets like North America, Japan, and Western Europe declined 6.3 percent year-over-year.

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Still, IDC research analyst Jitesh Ubrani says this decline "is by no means worrisome" because the wearables market is transitioning to become "more sophisticated." Instead of tracking basic data points like steps, calories, and workout minutes, future wearables "are well on track to become prescriptive and diagnostic tools." Rumors related to Apple Watch fall in line with this idea, with reports describing future Apple Watch models that could include an EKG heart monitor and track blood glucose levels.
"The decline in mature markets is by no means worrisome as these markets are in the midst of transitioning to more sophisticated wearables," said Jitesh Ubrani senior research analyst for IDC Mobile Device Trackers.

"While the previous generation of wearables was focused on providing descriptive feedback like step counts, the current and upcoming generations are far more capable and are well on track to becoming prescriptive and diagonistic tools. Surrounding these smarter wearables is a constellation of technologies and service providers that includes app developers, telcos, component makers, healthcare insitutuions and more - each poised for growth in the coming years."
Overall, IDC says that "two key forces" were at work in Q2 2018: "stronger demand for smart wearables" and "slower decline in the basic wearables market." IDC's data describes a smart watch as a product like Apple Watch or Fitbit Versa, while a basic wearable is something like the Fitbit Charge or Garmin Vivosport.

With this in mind, the researchers state that Apple saw continued demand for its LTE-enabled Apple Watch Series 3 in the quarter, which came as a "welcome addition to many telco channels worldwide." In total, Apple saw a 38.4 year-over-year growth in its Apple Watch shipments from 2017 to 2018. It should be noted that Apple itself does not report Apple Watch sales figures, so IDC's numbers today are just estimates.

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Behind Apple's 17 percent share and 4.7 million Apple Watch shipments was Xiaomi, which owned 15.1 percent of the market and shipped 4.2 million devices in the second quarter, a growth of 19.8 percent from 2017. While Fitbit sat at third place with a 9.5 percent share and 2.7 million units shipped, this was the biggest decline tracked by IDC, dropping 21.7 percent year-over-year.

Rounding out the last two spots were Huawei at a 6.5 percent share and 1.8 million units shipped (growing 118.1 percent from the year-ago quarter) and Garmin at a 5.3 percent share and 1.5 million units shipped (up 4.1 percent). IDC says that Garmin "extended its lead over Samsung," knocking the company out of the top five spots as Garmin's shipment volume of smart watches eclipsed its basic wearables volume.

As smart watches continue to grow in popularity, we're about one week away from the official unveiling of the Apple Watch Series 4, which leaked last week. The wearable will have smaller bezels with more visible screen space, and at least one new watch face that includes more complications than ever before on Apple Watch.

Article Link: Apple Watch Led Wearables Market in Q2 2018 on Strength of LTE Models
 
I don't want my watch to be a prescriptive diagnostic tool. I just want it to give me notifications, track my workouts, and have a battery that lasts more than a day.
 
Nice to see this segment slowly build up steam. I remember how many people were calling this a dud because it didn't explode out of the gate.
I think with LTE the watch gains a lot more freedom. You can actually go for a run or to the gym without a phone and still have music, workouts, tracking, phone calls and messages.

The S4 is going to be huge with the larger screen and seemingly thinner body (And the cleaning up of the hideous red button.)
 
Nice to see this segment slowly build up steam. I remember how many people were calling this a dud because it didn't explode out of the gate.
It's because the cell phone market was well established and companies were putting out the same garbage every year until Apple came in and blew it up. The smart watch market had just gotten started before Apple entered it. People are really bad at setting realistic expectations.
 
I don't want my watch to be a prescriptive diagnostic tool. I just want it to give me notifications, track my workouts, and have a battery that lasts more than a day.

A lot of people wants health diagnostic tool with their Apple Watch. If what you need is just notification and track workouts, the Apple Watch is overkill for you in my opinion.
 
I don't want my watch to be a prescriptive diagnostic tool. I just want it to give me notifications, track my workouts, and have a battery that lasts more than a day.
Honestly, why not save some money and just get a FitBit or something if that is all you want? Hell, even just grab a Series 1 and stick with it.
 
I'm actually really looking forward to Apple Watch Series 4. I know several people who have never been interested in smart watches who are going to buy a Series 4 this autumn, and I'm looking forward to letting my Series 0 rest in peace.
 
So looking forward to no red dot with the upcoming watches. I'd love to go for the LTE version, but I'd never pay Verizon the extra $120/year (plus their usual additional ~15% in hidden fees) so I guess that's off the table. Just hate being raped...
 
Anyone want to make the case for Apple Watch being a flop?

Look at the y/y growth despite almost having the most units shipped.

The watch/wearables are just getting started.
 
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Didn't Counterpoint just last week indicate the Series 1 outsold the LTE model 10:1 and the LTE model was basic no-show?

I don't think these clowns know a darn thing and make stuff up.
 
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Nice to see this segment slowly build up steam. I remember how many people were calling this a dud because it didn't explode out of the gate.
The iPhone didn't even explode out of the date. Give the watch 10 years of improvements and you'll see the momentum.

Apple probably already ships around 20-25M/yr.
 
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I don't want my watch to be a prescriptive diagnostic tool. I just want it to give me notifications, track my workouts, and have a battery that lasts more than a day.

That’s the beauty of smart devices. They are Swiss Army Knives, in that the tools are there if needed, but if you don’t want to use the corkscrew, you don’t have to use it. It’s better, because if you need something that isn’t part of the original toolset, you can just add/download it.

Truly great times we live in.
 
I want health sensors on a watch, along with good sports tracking. This interests me far more than a watch that’s a phone or even a phone itself actually. AW3 is very close with sports tracking but just not quite there, AW4, here’s hoping. Garmin does this best but...oh so FUGLY.
 
It took allot of patience to skip AW3 with my series 0 and it seems like it will be well worth it. 1 feature I really need (but I am not sure it will happen) is overseas roaming support for LTE.
 
That Apple shipped more than Fitbit is impressive. If these figures are to be trusted.
Look at the "Other Products" growth in AAPL's financials and it's clear the Watch is growing quickly. 38% growth.

According to Cook, Revenue from wearables, which includes the Apple Watch and AirPods, saw 60 percent growth year over year.
 
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