Nokia loses ground on CDMA

It's a wild, swinging market out there...

By Ben Charny, 22 May 2003 12:00

NEWS Despite a push to sell more phones meant for North America and Asia, handset maker Nokia lost ground in these key mobile phone markets, an analyst report suggests. The Finnish company dominates the market for mobile phones that comply with the GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) standard, used by about 75 percent of the world's wireless diallers. Nokia has a market-leading 43 percent share in the first quarter, according to a quarterly update of handset sales by Strategy Analytics. But Nokia is supplying fewer phones that use a standard called CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access), popular in North America, Japan and Korea. During the first three months of 2003, Nokia supplied about 7.6 percent of the world's CDMA phones, versus 11.3 percent during the same period last year, according to the market researchers. Although major handset makers Samsung, Motorola and LG Infocomm have been making CDMA phones for years, Nokia began only recently and "still hasn't perfected it to the level of Asian makers," said Chris Ambrosio, director in global wireless practice at Strategy Analytics. Ambrosio believes the picture should brighten for Nokia later this year when it begins selling less-sophisticated CDMA phones, an area where Nokia will presumably be on technological par with rivals. Nokia spokesman Keith Nowak said "wild swings" in the CDMA market are normal because only a handful of carriers use the standard. "When you have a few large carriers, instead of a lot of smaller ones, whatever they have or are promoting - it really skews the numbers a lot," Nowak said. The world's leading supplier of CDMA phones remains South Korea-based electronics maker Samsung Electronics, which finished the first quarter of 2003 with 29 percent, according to Strategy Analytics. LG, with 20 percent share, Motorola with 19 percent share and Kyocera with 11 percent share round out the top four. Nokia is in fifth place.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ