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Nokia Tumbles Amidst Competition From Apple, Samsung

Nokia took a tumble in the third quarter, falling from No. 3 to No. 7 in worldwide smartphone sales as Samsung and Apple continued to dominate the space, according to new stats from Gartner.

November 14, 2012

Nokia took a tumble in the third quarter, falling from No. 3 to No. 7 in worldwide smartphone sales as Samsung and Apple continued to dominate the space, according to new stats from Gartner.

"Nokia had a particularly bad quarter with smartphone sales" of just 7.2 million, Gartner said today. The company, however, did not have any major releases in the second quarter and is betting big on its Windows Phone 8-based , which hit the U.S. this month.

"The arrival of the new Lumia devices on Windows 8 should help to halt the decline in share in the fourth quarter of 2012, although it won't be until 2013 to see a significant improvement in Nokia's position," Gartner said.

The company fared a bit better with overall mobile phone sales. Though they declined by 21.9 percent during the quarter, sales of "82.3 million were better than Gartner's early estimate, largely driven by increased sales of the ," Gartner said.

Nokia's drop allowed the troubled Research in Motion to capture the No. 3 spot behind Samsung and Apple, while HTC came in No. 4. "[But] both HTC and RIM have seen their sales declining in past few quarters, and the challenges might prevent them from holding on to their current rankings in coming quarters," said Anshul Gupta, a principal research analyst at Gartner.

Together, Apple and Samsung control 46.5 percent of the smartphone shelf, "leaving a handful of vendors fighting over a distant third spot," Gupta said. Samsung sold 55 million smartphones, while Apple sold 23.6 million, Gartner said.

On the OS front, Android continued to increase its share, up almost 20 percent in the latest quarter for 72.4 percent of the market. Apple's iOS came in second with 13.9 percent, followed by RIM with 5.3 percent. With the iPhone 5 launch and the holiday season on the horizon, however, Apple's share will likely increase in the coming months, Gartner said.

Similarly, Microsoft's OS lost its footing, as the wait for Windows Phone 8 dampened demand for Windows Phone 7 devices, but that might pick up in the fourth quarter, as well.

The growth of next-quarter operating system markets may not come in the form of smartphone activations, though. Gartner analysts said that phone makers shouldn't expect the usual end-of-the-year boost from seasonal buyers. Instead, predictions of lower-than-usual holiday sales point to cautious consumers looking to curb their spending, or the idea that new gadgets like tablets simply make more attractive gifts.

Overall, third quarter mobile phone sales reached almost 428 million units, a 3.1 percent decline from the same period last year, while smartphones, which account for 39.6 percent of total mobile sales, grew 46.9 percent from the third quarter of 2011.

"After two consecutive quarters of decline in mobile phone sales, demand has improved in both mature and emerging markets as sales increased sequentially," Gupta said.

He cited China, currently the world's largest mobile market, where smartphone sales grew, but demand for feature phones remained weak. Mature markets were propped up in part by people replacing existing smartphones with new devices, like Apple's iPhone 5 and the Samsung Galaxy S III.

For more, see PCMag's and the slideshow above, as well as our .

Chloe Albanesius contributed to this report.