WASHINGTON — The global smartphone market will see cooler growth in the next few years, amid "cutthroat" competition that will bring down prices for many consumers, a market tracker said Monday.
A forecast by the research firm IDC indicates smartphone sales of 1.5 billion units in 2015, a rise of 12.2% from the current year's estimate. That would mean growth falling by more than half from the 26% pace of 2014.
The sluggish growth is likely to continue through 2018, IDC said, with the average increase over the period just 9.8%.
Significantly, smartphone prices are likely to drop from an average selling price of $297 in 2014 to $241 by 2018.
Emerging markets like India will see much lower smartphone prices -- $135 in 2014 and $102 by 2018.
Smartphone revenues "will be hard hit by the increasingly cutthroat nature of pricing," growing just 4.2% over the same forecast period, according to IDC.