Smartphone sales in the top 50 Indian cities fell sharply by 30.5 % in November 2016 over the previous month, hit by double whammy of liquid cash crunch and cyclical softness post festive season, research firm IDC said today.
According to IDC's report, the slowdown was seen across all city tiers, with a de-growth of 31.7 % in tier I cities and 29.5 % in tier II, III and IV cities in November over October.
"This downward trend can be attributed to demonetisation and resulting cash crunch along with the cyclically lean period after festive season in October," IDC said.
The smartphone industry is believed to have sold around a third of entire years' volume during the festive season in October.
Cash purchases make up a significant portion of these purchases in both online and offline channels, hence the impact seen was immediate and more in below $200 price range (about Rs 13,600) which still makes up a large portion of the market, IDC said.
Demonetisation impacted the smartphone market at almost all levels, including customer demand and stock movement in distribution channels, IDC India Senior Market Analyst Upasana Joshi said.
"There was a huge drop in inquiries and significantly reduced footfall at the retail. To counter this, mobile phone retailers together with micro finance companies started offering zero down payment options to stir sales," she said.
Interestingly, the premium smartphone segment saw some growth during the weeks following demonetisation, wherein consumers were seen rushing to buy higher priced smartphones using the demonetised currency, Joshi said.
Indian vendors were hit the most due to demonetisation, with a drop of 37.2 % in November as compared to Chinese vendors, who saw 26.5 % drop.
Global vendors had a 30.5 % drop over October.
"In the offline channel, while the Indian vendors were struggling, the Chinese vendors like Oppo and Vivo pulled in strong demand largely due to their strong hold on distribution and better partner incentive schemes and promotional activities during the slowdown," IDC India Market Analyst Varun Singh said.
However, IDC expects the impact of demonetisation to be transitory with the market expected to bounce back to normal levels by Feb 2017, Singh added.
02:27 PM IST