Smartphone market poised for ‘sharpest decline on record’ in 2026

Smartphone market poised for ‘sharpest decline on record’ in 2026


KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA – SEPTEMBER 19: Customers line up outside an Apple store ahead of the launch of the iPhone 17 series at Tun Razak Exchange (TRX) on September 19, 2025 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The iPhone 17 line represents the next generation of iPhones and accessories set to hit international markets. (Photo by Annice Lyn/Getty Images)

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Analysts are forecasting the worst-ever decline in the global smartphone market in 2026, as dwindling memory supplies continue to drive up prices of devices.

The worsening memory crisis could see the global PC and smartphone markets shrink by 11% and 13% respectively, according to a report from the International Data Corporation.

Meanwhile, Counterpoint Research is projecting a 12% year-on-year fall in global smartphone shipments in 2026 — the “sharpest decline on record,” with smartphone shipments this year expected to fall to their lowest annual volumes since 2013.

The warnings come as technology companies looking to cash in on the AI boom through aggressive investments in AI infrastructure are straining memory chip inventories, leaving manufacturers in other memory-intensive sectors, like smartphone and PC producers, scrambling to secure chip supplies.

“A lot of these memory companies are asking smartphone vendors to stand in line behind the hyperscalers, which means allocation [to smartphone vendors] is deprioritized over other segments in the industry — AI in this case,” Tarun Pathak, Counterpoint’s research director of devices and ecosystems, told CNBC.

The chip shortage has already resulted in price surges for components like rapid access memory (RAM) cards, which are necessary for both consumer electronics and the large data center complexes that AI hyperscalers like Amazon and Meta are rushing to invest in.

While this reallocation of chip supplies has affected device manufacturers for years, previous forecasts on the impacts of the AI-fueled demand continually underestimated the severity of the shortage, according to Bryan Ma, vice president of devices research at the IDC.

“It’s dramatically worsened over the past few months,” Ma said. “We actually did a forecast back in November… but in the weeks that followed, right after we published that forecast, it just got worse and worse.”

The IDC had initially expected growth in the global PC and smartphone markets of around 8.3% and 2%, respectively, this year, but adjusted their predictions to reflect the worsening outlook in chip supplies.

Similarly, Counterpoint sees a “structural downturn” taking place in the smartphone market, despite shipments growing by 3.8% year-on-year in the fourth quarter of 2025, as the severity of the chip shortage surpassed expectations.

Structural shifts

Both reports see the worsening chip crunch producing structural shifts in the consumer electronics market.

The chip shortage would likely force manufacturers to pass the burden of their shrinking margins on to consumers, which would likely mean fewer new users and longer replacement cycles for existing users, according to Counterpoint’s Pathak.

However, other opportunities exist, as the secondary and used smartphone market look set to grow with a growing share of consumers priced out by rising memory prices, Pathak said.

Both reports expect OEMs to invariably prioritize sales of mid- to higher-end models, with some manufacturers possibly exiting the lower-end market entirely.

Nutanix CEO: Memory shortages will take some time to normalize

Memory costs comprise a significantly larger share of the prices for lower-end models, making it “difficult for vendors to stay profitable while keeping prices down,” Ma said.

Larger players will likely also be better poised to endure the near-term uncertainty in chip supplies, as companies like Apple and Samsung have “stronger supply chain integration, higher pricing power, and continued premiumization,” according to Counterpoint’s report.

“This is a scale game… when you look at the vendors that tend to have a relative advantage, it’s the bigger guys,” Ma said.

But beyond scales of economy, models from ostensibly higher-end manufacturers like Apple and Samsung command a greater share of even the used market, as such models have a greater “aspirational pull,” Pathak said.

The forecasts pose a gloomy outlook for the consumer devices market in the near term, with the earliest inflection point expected in late 2027, should “additional memory capacity [come] online,” Counterpoint said.

The IDC is eyeing opportunities from increasing memory capacity buildouts and a potential influx of smaller memory suppliers from China for signs of relief. Apart from that, the firm sees little reassurance in the near term, according to Ma.

Pathak, however, remains optimistic. “The smartphone market has always been resilient… eventually, people will need a phone.”



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