Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Unsecured creditors ally with bankrupt Alabama county


(Reuters) - Alabama's bankrupt Jefferson County got some unexpected allies on Tuesday, when unsecured creditors lined up with the county in America's biggest municipal bankruptcy to fight a proposed September 28 deadline for a workout plan.
Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp, which insures some of the county's $3.14 billion of defaulted sewer-system warrants, on July 10 asked the federal judge overseeing the case to set a hard deadline for the county to develop an exit plan.
If Jefferson County, whose finances were ravaged by soured sewer-system debt and the 2011 loss of a local jobs tax, failed to produce an adjustment plan by a deadline set by Judge Thomas Bennett, the bankruptcy case could be thrown out, lawyers said.
Bennett has not ruled on the request by Assured, which argued the county has been dragging its heels in developing a workout plan on reorganizing its $4.23 billion of debt since declaring Chapter 9 bankruptcy on November 9.
On Tuesday, unsecured creditors Wells Fargo and National Public Finance Guarantee Corp, which insures county general obligation debt, filed briefs saying Assured's proposed deadline would hobble their efforts to secure payments.
Creditors without collateral rights need more time beyond September 28 "to request, receive, and evaluate information regarding the county's assets, liabilities, and operations," lawyers for Wells Fargo Bank and National Public Finance Guarantee, said.
In addition, the cash-strapped county government needs time to work out an operating budget and to lobby Alabama state lawmakers to restore the lost local jobs tax that is central to its revenue stream, the lawyers for Wells Fargo said. The jobs tax was declared unconstitutional.
"Imposing any deadline that would preclude a complete investigation of the county's finances and foreclose the possibility of meaningful negotiations ... could be highly prejudicial to unsecured creditors," Wells Fargo said.
Jefferson County, which has the sole right under Chapter 9 law to hammer out an adjustment plan, said in a separate filing that other municipal bankruptcies had much longer periods to develop plans.
Denouncing Assured's deadline request as a legal ploy, lawyers for Jefferson County said they were in talks with major creditors on a workout plan and were conducting public hearings on locally unpopular sewer-system rate hikes that would benefit bondholders.
"The county anticipates that it will continue to engage in a process of negotiation with the full spectrum of its creditors in the coming weeks and months," the county's lawyers said.
Jefferson County's workout plan, which must be judged fair to creditors and reasonable in light of its finances and obligations, must be approved by Bennett and can include reductions in bonds and other debt.
Jefferson County in June lost a courtroom fight over the size of payments due to creditors from thesewer system's monthly revenues. Bennett ruled county officials had been improperly holding back about $54 million a year.
Home of Birmingham, Alabama's business hub, Jefferson County filed for bankruptcy after a tentative agreement with creditors unwound. That deal might have delivered a $1 billion reduction in the county's debts and possibly eased hundreds of government job cuts and reductions in public services.
(Reporting By Michael Connor in Miami; Editing by Bob Burgdorfer)

U.S. ANALYST RATINGS: Upgrades, Downgrades, Initiations


UPGRADES:
  * BroadSoft (BSFT) raised to buy: Goldman
  * Concho Resources (CXO) raised to outperform: Wells Fargo
  * Facebook (FB) raised to market perform: Bernstein
  * Horizon Technology (HRZN) raised to buy: UBS
  * Hudson City Bancorp (HCBK) raised to buy: Guggenheim Partners
  * Luminex (LMNX) raised to neutral: Piper
  * Meridian Bioscience (VIVO) raised to neutral: Wedbush
  * Nanosphere (NSPH) raised to overweight: Piper
  * On Assignment (ASGN) raised to buy: Deutsche Bank
  * Sprint (S) raised to overweight: Altantic Equities
  * USANA Health Services (USNA) raised to buy: Canaccord


DOWNGRADES:
  * Advent Software (ADVS) cut to neutral: Wedbush
  * Anadigics (ANAD) cut to hold: Needham
  * Arthur J Gallagher (AJG) cut to equalweight: Barclays
  * Blackrock Kelso (BKCC) cut to neutral: UBS
  * Boardwalk Pipeline Partners (BWP) cut to neutral: Credit Suisse
  * Brown & Brown (BRO) cut to equalweight: Barclays
  * CafePress (PRSS) cut to neutral: Cowen
  * Chicago Bridge & Iron (CBI) cut to neutral: Credit Suisse
  * Dendreon (DNDN) cut to hold: Deutsche Bank
  * Dendreon (DNDN) cut to neutral: JPMorgan
  * Ensco (ESV) cut to reduce: Swedbank
  * Knightsbridge Tankers (VLCCF) cut to underweight: Evercore
  * Legg Mason (LM) cut to negative: Susquehanna
  * Lincoln Electric (LECO) cut to gradually accumulate: Wellington
  * Lindsay (LNN) cut to neutral: Wedbush
  * Luminex (LMNX) cut to market peform: William Blair
  * Pitney Bowes (PBI) cut to hold: Brean Murray
  * PMC-Sierra (PMCS) cut to hold: Jefferies
  * PMC-Sierra (PMCS) cut to hold: Wunderlich Securities
  * Salix Pharma (SLXP) cut to hold: ThinkEquity
  * Tessera (TRSA) cut to underperform: BOFAML
  * Tower Group (TWGP) cut to market perform: Keefe
  * UNS Energy Corp (UNS) cut to neutral: DA Davidson
  * Vertex Pharmaceuticals (VRTX) cut to neutral: Piper


INITIATIONS:
  * Cablevision Systems (CVC) new hold: Jefferies
  * Charter Communications (CHTR) new hold: Jefferies
  * Comcast Corp (CMCSA) new buy: Jefferies
  * DFC Global (DLLR) new outperform: Credit Suisse
  * DirecTV (DTV) new buy: Jefferies
  * DISH Network (DISH) new hold: Jefferies
  * Exelon (EXC) new equalweight: Morgan Stanley
  * Limoneira (LMNR) new buy: Roth Capital
  * OmniVision Technologies (OVTI) new overweight: Stephens
  * ReachLocal (RLOC) new buy: ThinkEquity
  * Time Warner Cable (TWC) new buy: Jefferies
  * US Steel (X) new sell: Axiom Capital
  * Watsco (WSO) new neutral: Lazard

Previewing Fed Meeting & Jackson Hole

In one more day we will have another Fed meeting and in about a month we will the (in)famous Jackson Hole annual gathering.  What can we expect from each event?

From some of Bernanke's past speeches, we can see that he has laid out a game plan for what he intends to do.  Below you can see a bullet point list of the main tools Bernanke has laid out in his 2002 Deflation speech (where he earned the nickname 'Helicopter Ben') and his 2010 speech at Jackson Hole.  From his 2002 speech, we can cross off items one through four on the list seeing as how each have been done in some capacity already.  From Bernanke's 2010 speech we can cross off items one and two as having already been completed.  There has been some chatter in the media about the Fed enacting point 3 to reduce interest earned on excess reserves (IOER), but I doubt this will happen on Wednesday's meeting.

Wednesday's Fed meeting will most likely have the same tone that the last few statements had (ie: slower growth, housing market doing okay, employment painfully slow, and the longer term inflation outlook in check).  If there is a change at this meeting, they will lengthen the time in which the Fed expects to keep rates low (right now it the language has it low till late 2014).  If we have anything more announced at this meeting I'd be quite surprised.

As far as the Jackson Hole event, we may see some new policy tools put into play depending on how the market has acted up to that point.  If the market keeps chugging along then Bernanke will see no need to enact extraordinary policy responses.  For now he will be content on having a bazooka in his pocket and reiterating the point that he is not afraid to us it.  We all remember how well that worked out for Paulson.  Granted, we are not in an all-out panic mode, but we could we approaching that point rather quickly.

Bernanke’s Game Plan (2002 Deflation Speech):
  1. Traditional monetary policy (decreasing short-term rates)
  2. Fed must expand the scale of its asset purchases or, possibly, expand the menu of assets that it buys
  3. A commitment to keep short-term rates at zero for some time OR have the Fed announce explicit ceilings on longer-maturity Treasury debt (say, bonds maturing within the next two years)
  4. Operate in the markets for agency debt
  5. Fed to offer fixed-term loans to banks at low or zero interest, with a wide range of private assets (including, among others, corporate bonds, commercial paper, bank loans, and mortgages) deemed as collateral.
  6. Have the Treasury issue debt to purchase private assets and the Fed purchase an equal amount of Treasury debt with newly created money. 
Bernanke’s Game Plan (2010 Jackson Hole Speech):
  1. Conduct additional purchases of longer-term securities
  2. Modify the committee’s communications
  3. Reduce the interest paid on excess reserves
  4. Have the FOMC increase its inflation goals (not widely accepted)

Monday, July 30, 2012

Latest iPhone 5 rumor - announce date will be Sept 12


Next iPhone, New iPad Mini to Be Announced Sept. 12, Report Says


The next iPhone is expected this fall. Above we see a purported iPhone 5 chassis assembled from individually leaked parts. Photo: iLab.cc
Referencing “sources who have proven accurate in the past,” Rene Ritchie of the website iMore reports the next-generation iPhone and iPad mini will be announced on September 12, with both products available for purchase on September 21. The fall release puts the phone and perpetually rumored tablet on the market in time for the holiday shopping season.
While iMore may not have much name recognition in the blogosphere, it has a strong track record in successfully reporting Apple product launch dates. On February 13 of this year, Ritchie accurately reported that the new iPad (which he described as iPad 3) would be announced on March 7. The author had similar success predicting pre-order dates for the iPhone 4S.
It’s all but certain that Apple will announce a new iPhone soon — the iPhone 4S is ripe for an update, and iPhone 5 rumor reports are hitting critical mass. In fact, just this Sunday, a website in Japan reported it had assembled the new phone’s chassis from random leaked parts. However, an imminent small form factor iPad — rumors peg the display at 7.85 inches — is much less certain. The smaller iPad would go toe-to-toe against the Kindle Fire and the Nexus 7, entering a sizing category with proven consumer interest. While Apple dominates the tablet market, it has yet to release a device that challenges the smaller tablet field.
If the iMore report is true, Apple would be releasing the next-generation iPhone a little less than a year after releasing the iPhone 4S, which hit the streets on October 14, 2011. Apple traditionally employed a yearly refresh cycle for the iPhone until last year’s 16-month wait for the iPhone 4S.
The updated iPhone is expected to sport a smaller dock connector, larger four-inch touch screen, and a redesigned case
Source: http://bit.ly/R0vDXj

U.S. ANALYST RATINGS: Upgrades, Downgrades, Initiations


UPGRADES:
  * Aeropostale (ARO) raised to outperform: RBC Capital
  * Arch Coal (ACI) raised to buy: Sterne
  * Bunge (BG) raised to buy: Topeka
  * Chico’s FAS (CHS) raised to overweight: Piper Jaffray
  * Ciena (CIEN) raised to hold: Jefferies
  * Con-way (CNW) raised to outperform: Baird
  * Deere & Co (DE) raised to overweight: Piper Jaffray
  * Helmerich & Payne (HP) raised to buy: Canaccord
  * Noble Energy (NBL) raised to outperform: FBR Capital
  * Petrologistics (PDH) raised to buy: Citi
  * Phillips 66 (PSX) raised to overweight: Barclays
  * Qiagen (QGEN) raised to buy: Metzler
  * Saic Inc. (SAI) raised to neutral: Susquehanna
  * Washington REIT (WRE) raised to buy: Stifel Nicolaus


DOWNGRADES:
  * Annaly Capital (NLY) cut to underperform: Wells Fargo
  * Buckle (BKE) cut to sell: Janney Montgomery
  * Cerner (CERN) cut to neutral: Cowen
  * Conceptus (CPTS) cut to neutral: Piper Jaffray
  * Electronic Arts (EA) cut to neutral: Longbow
  * Eli Lilly (LLY) cut to underperform: Jefferies
  * Equinix (EQIX) cut to neutral: Citigroup
  * Global Payments (GPN) cut to neutral: Cowen
  * Gorman-rupp (GRC) cut to hold: Jefferies
  * Graphic Packaging (GPK) cut to neutral: JP Morgan
  * JP Morgan (JPM) cut to hold: Deutsche Bank
  * KAR Auction Services (KAR) cut to neutral: Goldman
  * Newell Rubbermaid (NWL) cut to equalweight: Morgan Stanley
  * Pacific Biosciences (PACB) cut to underweight: Morgan Stanley
  * Peet’s Coffee & Tea (PEET) cut to hold: KeyBanc
  * Petsmart (PETM) cut to neutral: Nomura
  * PulteGroup (PHM) cut to neutral: citigroup
  * RailAmerica (RA) cut to equalweight: Stephens
  * Salix Pharmaceuticals (SLXP) cut to hold: Cantor
  * Salix Pharmaceuticals (SLXP) cut to neutral: Susquehanna
  * Teledyne Technologies (TDY) cut to underweight: BB&T
  * Washington Banking (WBCO) cut to sector perform: RBC Capital
  * Weyerhaeuser (WY) cut to neutral: DA Davidson


INITIATIONS:
  * AMC Networks (AMCX) new underweight: Evercore
  * ARIAD Pharmaceuticals (ARIA) new outperform: William Blair
  * Cirrus Logic (CRUS) new buy: Canaccord
  * EQT Midstream Partners(EQM) new outperform: Wells Fargo
  * SanDisk (SNDK) new hold: Needham

Friday, July 27, 2012

Draghi does it two days in a row


Draghi Said to Hold Talks With Weidmann on ECB Bond Purchases

     July 27 (Bloomberg) -- ECB President Mario Draghi will hold talks with Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann in the coming days in an effort to overcome the biggest stumbling block to a new
raft of measures including bond purchases, two central bank officials said
  * Having secured the backing of governments in Spain, France and Germany, Draghi is now seeking to win over ECB policy makers for a multi-pronged approach to reduce bond yields in countries
such as Spain and Italy, the officials said on condition of anonymity because the talks are private
  * Draghi’s proposal involves Europe’s rescue funds buying government bonds on the primary market, flanked by ECB purchases on the secondary market to ensure transmission of its record low interest rates, the officials said
  * Further ECB rate cuts and long-term loans to banks are also up for discussion, one of the officials said

US GDP and consumption releases. Slightly better than expected, but slowing


GDP QoQ (Annualized) (United States) {US}
OBSERVATION PERIOD: 2Q A (Quarterly)
ACTUAL  : 1.5%
PRIOR   : 1.9%
REVISED : 2.0%
SURVEY  : 1.4%  (Mean: 1.4%, High: 1.9%, Low: 0.7%)


Core PCE QoQ (United States) {US}
OBSERVATION PERIOD: 2Q A (Quarterly)
ACTUAL  : 1.8%
PRIOR   : 2.3%
REVISED : 2.2%
SURVEY  : 1.8%  (Mean: 1.8%, High: 2.1%, Low: 1.5%)


Personal Consumption (United States) {US}
OBSERVATION PERIOD: 2Q A (Quarterly)
ACTUAL  : 1.5%
PRIOR   : 2.5%
REVISED : 2.4%
SURVEY  : 1.3%  (Mean: 1.4%, High: 2.3%, Low: 0.7%)




U.S. ANALYST RATINGS: Upgrades, Downgrades, Initiations


UPGRADES:
  * AmerisourceBergen (ABC) raised to outperform: Baird
  * Amgen (AMGN) raised to overweight: Piper
  * Expedia (EXPE) raised to equalweight: Morgan Stanley
  * FMC Technologies (FTI) raised to buy: BofA/ML
  * Informatica (INFA) raised to buy: Mizuho Securities
  * International Paper (IP) raised to buy: CLSA
  * IMAX (IMAX) cut to neutral: Wedbush
  * IXIA (XXIA) raised to buy: Deutsche Bank
  * Magellan Midstream (MMP) raised to outperform: Credit Suisse
  * MetroPCS (PCS) raised to buy: Deutsche Bank
  * Quality Systems (QSII) raised to outperform: Oppenheimer
  * Sprint (S) raised to buy: UBS
  * SunTrust (STI) raised to hold: ISI Group
  * Valley National (VLY) raised to neutral: Sterne Agee


DOWNGRADES:
  * Acme Packet (APKT) cut to sector perform: Pacific Crest
  * Cash America (CSH) cut to market perform: Wells Fargo
  * Charles River (CRL) cut to market perform: William Blair
  * Coinstar (CSTR) cut to sector perform: Pacific Crest
  * Colgate (CL) cut to hold: Deutsche Bank
  * CRA International (CRAI) cut to mkt perform: William Blair
  * Douglas Emmett (DEI) cut to underweight: Barclays
  * Dow (DOW) cut to equalweight: Morgan Stanley
  * Flir Systems (FLIR) cut to hold: BB&T
  * GE (GE) cut to market perform: Bernstein
  * Green Dot (GDOT) cut to hold: Jefferies
  * Green Dot (GDOT) cut to market perform: JMP
  * Green Dot (GDOT) cut to neutral: JPMorgan
  * HealthSouth (HLS) cut to hold: Jefferies
  * Linn Energy (LINE) cut to neutral: Credit Suisse
  * Medical Bioscience (VIVO) cut to hold: Canaccord
  * Pacific Biosciences (PACB) cut to underweight: Piper
  * Qlogic (QLGC) cut to underperform: Pacific Crest
  * Royal Caribbean (RCL) cut to hold: Nordea
  * SandRidge Mississippian (SDT) cut to sector perform: RBC
  * Starbucks (SBUX) cut to neutral: Baird
  * United Continental (UAL) cut to market perform: Raymond James
  * Valley National Bancorp (VLY) cut to underweight: JPMorgan
  * Walter Energy (WLT) cut to equalweight: Johnson Rice


INITIATIONS:
  * Agco (AGCO) new outperform: BMO
  * Apricus Biosciences (APRI) new buy: Lazard
  * Caterpillar (CAT) new market perform: BMO
  * Cummins (CMI) new market perform: BMO
  * Deere (DE) new outperform: BMO
  * Illinois Tool Works (ITW) new outperform: BMO
  * Joy Global (JOY) new underperform: BMO
  * Kennametal (KMT) new market perform: BMO
  * Liquidity Services (LQDT) new buy: BOFAML
  * Middleby Corp (MIDD) new market perform: BMO
  * Navistar Intl (NAV) new underperform: BMO
  * Paccar (PCAR) new outperform: BMO
  * Parker Hannifin (PH) new market perform: BMO
  * Prospect Global Resource (PGRXE) new buy: Sterne
  * Synders-Lance (LNCE) new hold: Deutsche Bank
  * Terex (TEX) new outperform: BMO

Thursday, July 26, 2012

The speech that made today's rally possible...

...even if it is short-lived!

The one line that every talking head squawked about today: "... the ECB is ready to do whatever it takes to preserve the euro. And believe me, it will be enough."  Of course the media failed to quote the first part of the line, "Within our mandate,".  So they'll do things that fall into their mandate and at times they'll even interpret their mandate creatively to justify actions.  But it was not a blanket, "whatever it takes" mentality.  Draghi did give himself an out.

Verbatim of the remarks made by Mario Draghi

Speech by Mario Draghi, President of the European Central Bank
at the Global Investment Conference in London
26 July 2012

(…)
I asked myself what sort of message I want to give to you; I wouldn’t use the word “sell”, but actually I think the best thing I could do, is to give you a candid assessment of how we view the euro situation from Frankfurt.
And the first thing that came to mind was something that people said many years ago and then stopped saying it: The euro is like a bumblebee. This is a mystery of nature because it shouldn’t fly but instead it does. So the euro was a bumblebee that flew very well for several years. And now – and I think people ask “how come?” – probably there was something in the atmosphere, in the air, that made the bumblebee fly. Now something must have changed in the air, and we know what after the financial crisis. The bumblebee would have to graduate to a real bee. And that’s what it’s doing.
The first message I would like to send, is that the euro is much, much stronger, the euro area is much, much stronger than people acknowledge today. Not only if you look over the last 10 years but also if you look at it now, you see that as far as inflation, employment, productivity, the euro area has done either like or better than US or Japan.
Then the comparison becomes even more dramatic when we come to deficit and debt. The euro area has much lower deficit, much lower debt than these two countries. And also not less important, it has a balanced current account, no deficits, but it also has a degree of social cohesion that you wouldn’t find either in the other two countries.
That is a very important ingredient for undertaking all the structural reforms that will actually graduate the bumblebee into a real bee.
The second point, the second message I would like to send today, is that progress has been extraordinary in the last six months. If you compare today the euro area member states with six months ago, you will see that the world is entirely different today, and for the better.
And this progress has taken different shapes. At national level, because of course, while I was saying, while I was glorifying the merits of the euro, you were thinking “but that’s an average!”, and “in fact countries diverge so much within the euro area, that averages are not representative any longer, when the variance is so big”.
But I would say that over the last six months, this average, well the variances tend to decrease and countries tend to converge much more than they have done in many years - both at national level, in countries like Portugal, Ireland and countries that are not in the programme, like Spain and Italy.
The progress in undertaking deficit control, structural reforms has been remarkable. And they will have to continue to do so. But the pace has been set and all the signals that we get is that they don’t relent, stop reforming themselves. It’s a complex process because for many years, very little was done – I will come to this in a moment.
But a lot of progress has been done at supranational level. That’s why I always say that the last summit was a real success. The last summit was a real success because for the first time in many years, all the leaders of the 27 countries of Europe, including UK etc., said that the only way out of this present crisis is to have more Europe, not less Europe.
A Europe that is founded on four building blocks: a fiscal union, a financial union, an economic union and a political union. These blocks, in two words – we can continue discussing this later – mean that much more of what is national sovereignty is going to be exercised at supranational level, that common fiscal rules will bind government actions on the fiscal side.
Then in the banking union or financial markets union, we will have one supervisor for the whole euro area. And to show that there is full determination to move ahead and these are not just empty words, the European Commission will present a proposal for the supervisor in early September. So in a month. And I think I can say that works are quite advanced in this direction.
So more Europe, but also the various firewalls have been given attention and now they are ready to work much better than in the past.
The second message is that there is more progress than it has been acknowledged.
But the third point I want to make is in a sense more political.
When people talk about the fragility of the euro and the increasing fragility of the euro, and perhaps the crisis of the euro, very often non-euro area member states or leaders, underestimate the amount of political capital that is being invested in the euro.
And so we view this, and I do not think we are unbiased observers, we think the euro is irreversible. And it’s not an empty word now, because I preceded saying exactly what actions have been made, are being made to make it irreversible.
But there is another message I want to tell you.
Within our mandate, the ECB is ready to do whatever it takes to preserve the euro. And believe me, it will be enough.
There are some short-term challenges, to say the least. The short-term challenges in our view relate mostly to the financial fragmentation that has taken place in the euro area. Investors retreated within their national boundaries. The interbank market is not functioning. It is only functioning very little within each country by the way, but it is certainly not functioning across countries.
And I think the key strategy point here is that if we want to get out of this crisis, we have to repair this financial fragmentation.
There are at least two dimensions to this. The interbank market is not functioning, because for any bank in the world the current liquidity regulations make - to lend to other banks or borrow from other banks - a money losing proposition. So the first reason is that regulation has to be recalibrated completely.
The second point is in a sense a collective action problem: because national supervisors, looking at the crisis, have asked their banks, the banks under their supervision, to withdraw their activities within national boundaries. And they ring fenced liquidity positions so liquidity can’t flow, even across the same holding group because the financial sector supervisors are saying “no”.
So even though each one of them may be right, collectively they have been wrong. And this situation will have to be overcome of course.
And then there is a risk aversion factor. Risk aversion has to do with counterparty risk. Now to the extent that I think my counterparty is going to default, I am not going to lend to this counterparty. But it can be because it is short of funding. And I think we took care of that with the two big LTROs where we injected half a trillion of net liquidity into the euro area banks. We took care of that.
Then you have the counterparty recess related to the perception that my counterparty can fail because of lack of capital. We can do little about that.
Then there’s another dimension to this that has to do with the premia that are being charged on sovereign states borrowings. These premia have to, as I said, with default, with liquidity, but they also have to do more and more with convertibility, with the risk of convertibility. Now to the extent that these premia do not have to do with factors inherent to my counterparty - they come into our mandate. They come within our remit.
To the extent that the size of these sovereign premia hampers the functioning of the monetary policy transmission channel, they come within our mandate.
So we have to cope with this financial fragmentation addressing these issues.
I think I will stop here; I think my assessment was candid and frank enough.
Thank you.
European Central Bank
Directorate Communications
Press and Information Division
Kaiserstrasse 29, D-60311 Frankfurt am Main
Tel.: +49 69 1344 7455, Fax: +49 69 1344 7404
Internet: http://www.ecb.europa.eu
Reproduction is permitted provided that the source is acknowledged.

2012-Q1 Smartphone Stats


Recent sales stats (global):
  • IDC say 144.9 million smartphones sold worldwide in Q1 2012. Total 2011 sales were 491.4 million units.
  • Gartner estimate sales of smartphones in the same period at some 144.4 million. Estimated total sales across 2011were 472 million or 31% of mobile communication device sales. This compares with figures for 2010 from the same company of 297 million smartphones or 19% of the 1.6 billion mobile phones sold that year. So year-on-year smartphone sales rose 58%.
Recent sales stats (US and Canada):
  • Nielsen report that 46% of US mobile phone owners have a smartphone as of Q4 2011.
  • comScore estimate average US smartphone ownership at 41.8% of mobile subscribers or 98 million people for the same period.
  • They give an equivalent number for Canada of 45.3%.
  • A Pew Internet Project survey from February 2012 found46% of US adults owned a smartphone. The figure is 71% among 25-34 year-olds.
Recent sales stats (Europe):
  • IDC say 28.2 million smartphones sold in Western Europe in Q1 2012.
  • comScore put combined smartphone ownership for France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK at 44% of mobile users as of December 2011 (104 million users).
  • Kantar Worldpanel claim 48.9% of the British population have a smartphone.
  • Figures quoted in the FT put UK smartphone ownership at 46% as of August 2011.
  • According to Bitkom, 11.8 million smartphones were sold in 2011 in Germany, an increase of 31% over 2010. This represents 43% of the total number of mobile phones sold that year.
Sales predictions:
  • The Financial Times cites a JPMorgan prediction that 657 million smartphones will leave stores in 2012.
  • IDC expect 2012 smartphone sales to reach 686 million, andpredict they will rise to 982 million in 2015.
  • IMS Research expect smartphones to reach 1 billion in annual sales in 2016 (half the mobile device market).
  • Morgan Stanley Research estimates sales of smartphones will exceed those of PCs in 2012.

Smartphone operating systems

IDC looked at global Q1 2012 operating system share, placing Android well out in front:
smartphone OS share in Q1 2012
Source: IDC Worldwide Mobile Phone Tracker, May 24, 2012
Gartner's analysis of global Q1 2012 smartphone sales also shows the Android operating system dominating market share:
smartphone OS share in Q1 2012
Source: Gartner (May 2012)
Nielsen's figures for Q4 2011 in the US show Android as the leading OS with 46.3% of all currently-owned smartphones, followed by Apple's iPhone at 30% and the RIM OS at 14.9%:
smartphone OS share in US Q4 2011
Source: Nielsen (January 2012)
They also note that the dominance of Android and iOS is even greater among more recent smartphone purchases. This is confirmed by data from the NPD Group, who found Android phones making up 57% of new smartphones purchased in the US in Q4 2011. The iPhone OS took 34% and all others 9%. For US sales in the 12-week period ending Dec 25 2011, Kantar Worldpanel found 44.9% going to Apple and 44.8% to Android.
A comScore survey from December 2011 for the US gives the following figures for the operating system market:
smartphone OS share in USA 2011
Source: comScore (February 2012)

Smartphone manufacturers

May 2012 data from IDC for worldwide smartphone sales put Apple and Samsung phones on top for Q1 2012:
smartphone manufacturer share in 2012
Source: IDC Worldwide Mobile Phone Tracker, May 1, 2012



Chart: Top Five WW Smartphone Vendors, 1Q 2012, Five Quarter Market Share Changes (Units)Description: Source: IDC Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, May 1, 2012Note: Vendor shipments are branded shipments and exclude OEM sales for all vendors.IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker provides smart phone and feature phone market data in 54 countries by vendor, device type, air interface, operating systems and platforms, and generation. Over 20 additional technical segmentations are provided. The data is provided four times a year and includes historical and forecast trend analysis. For more information, or to subscribe to the research, please contact Kathy Nagamine at 1-650-350-6423 or knagamine@idc.com. For more information about this tracker go to: http://www.idc.com/tracker/showproductinfo.jsp?prod_id=37Tags: IDC, Tracker, Mobile Phone, Mobile Phones, Mobile Phone Tracker, 1Q201 ...Author: IDCcharts powered by iCharts

Share