Analysts: Don’t expect big sales of 5G phones anytime soon
Wireless operators in the United States have promised to
launch 5G services as early as this year—but don’t expect many customers to
upgrade to a new 5G smartphone anytime soon.
According to two new analyst forecasts, sales of 5G
smartphones will remain paltry for at least the next several years.
For example, Strategy Analytics said that it expects the
first 5G commercial handsets to go on sale starting in early 2019, but the firm
said that 5G handsets will only account for 5% of global handset sales by 2021.
“5G smartphone sales will begin in China, Japan, South Korea
and the USA from 2019,” analyst Ville-Petteri Ukonaho cautioned
in a release from the firm. “But volumes in 2019 will be in just the
millions, and only barely in the tens of millions in 2020.”
Similarly, Gartner predicted that,
by 2021, just 9% of smartphones sold will support 5G.
“By 2021, 5G networks in key countries in Asia and North
America will cover many urban centers, giving customers a reason to purchase 5G
smartphones,” added Ken Hyers, a director at Strategy Analytics, in therelease
from the firm. “By 2023, as 5G smartphone prices continue to fall and
next-generation wireless networks are built out across much of the developed
world, 5G handset sales will number in the hundreds of millions.”
Despite those relatively soft expectations, Verizon’s CEO is
nonetheless promising amazing devices. During
a recent event, Verizon’s Lowell McAdam said that users would only need
to charge 5G smartphones once every four weeks—comments that took most by
surprise considering 5G smartphone chipset makers like Qualcomm have cautioned
that initial 5G devices may require extra battery power.
As for the initial round of 5G devices, AT&T will
probably be the first U.S. carrier to sell a 5G device. The operator has
promised to release a “puck” later this year that will support its mobile 5G
service.
As for T-Mobile and Sprint, both have promised to offer 5G
smartphones in early 2019. Sprint has said it hopes to offer an “iconic-type
phone” from a Korean vendor early next year.
Culled from fiercewireless
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