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Apple Takes 104 Percent of All Smartphone Profits Following Galaxy Note 7 Recall (macrumors.com) 171

Apple accounted for over 100 percent of smartphone industry profits in the third quarter of this year, according to estimates published by BMO Capital Markets on Thursday. From a report on MacRumors: Analyst Tim Long, quoted in the Investor's Business Daily, said Apple's staggering 103.6 percent profit share in Q3 2016 came largely as a result of significant losses posted by rival vendors including LG and HTC, and despite Apple continuing to shift fewer handsets year on year. Based on units alone, Samsung accounted for 21.7 percent of all smartphones sold, with Apple coming in second with a 13.2 percent share. In terms of profits however, Samsung came a distant second to Apple, capturing only a 0.9 percent share.
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Apple Takes 104 Percent of All Smartphone Profits Following Galaxy Note 7 Recall

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  • 150% Sure (Score:3, Informative)

    by vortex2.71 ( 802986 ) on Friday November 04, 2016 @03:07PM (#53214829)

    I am 150% sure that they can't have more than 100% of the profit share. Thank you to math teachers everywhere for at least trying, but some can not be reached!

    • Re:150% Sure (Score:5, Insightful)

      by fermion ( 181285 ) on Friday November 04, 2016 @03:10PM (#53214867) Homepage Journal
      In previous years Apple and Samsung accounted for the majority of profits in the smartphone category. Now that Samsung has sunk itself, not only with exploding mobile devices but also exploding washing machines, the only profitable firm is Apple.

      The larger than 100% number is because most firms operate at a loss. For example, one can easily be 200% more productive than a very lazy coworker.

      • the only profitable firm is Apple.

        Is OnePlus making a profit?

        They are 4 phones in now... you'd think that they would be turning a profit by now.... right?

        Maybe not..

        How about Huawei and Xiaomi?

        Apple cannot be the only handset making who makes a profit... who would want to jump into that kind of environment? Yet there are so many handset manufacturers.... why would that be if only Apple makes a profit.

      • So, when can I buy my Apple washing machine? I REALLY need it. Gotta love these stupid stories.
        • So, when can I buy my Apple washing machine? I REALLY need it. Gotta love these stupid stories.

          Mmmmm.

          The AppleWash(tm) is quite simply the most elegant and powerful washer we have ever designed.

          When we set out to create the AppleWash(tm), we asked ourselves "How can we make something as simple as the Washing Machine better?" And I think you will agree that we have done it.

          Milled from a solid block of aircraft al-u-MIN-ium, and polished nine times in a proprietary process to a mirror finish, the AppleWash(tm) blends in perfectly with any decor.

          Rather than the noisy electromechanical valves tha

        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          Technically those stories are extremely stupid if Apple is putting them out because basically they are mocking their customers. Those profits do not come from the air, they do not come from other companies and they do not come from non-Apple customers, those profits all come from the pockets of Apple customers, they more they pay for the less they get, the more profit Apple makes. If a customer does not make a effort to cut back the profits of their suppliers, than that customer is a fool. Paying more for s

          • 1) People don't buy on the basis of profit margin for the manufacturer. They buy on whether the product is worth the price to them.

            2) You definately don't want to buy from a company that is making a loss. Because they'll either drop the product soon or go bankrupt. So there's no likelihood of long term support.

      • That Argument doesn't hold. You CANNOT have more than 100% of a share in a market. You can claim Apple have 100% of the profit (which also isn't true), you can't add other companies negative profits to the share.
        • Wait, don't you know you HAVE to add the losses into the market? How else can you turn a couple of a million dollar market (cab hailing) into a multi-billion dollar market? You have to add the billions of dollars of losses spent in trying to acquire and dominate that few million dollar market so you can claim the ENTIRE market is billions of dollars - and thus justify a tens of billions of dollars valuation for your domination of what, ultimately, is a few million dollar market.
        • by Pulzar ( 81031 )

          That Argument doesn't hold. You CANNOT have more than 100% of a share in a market. You can claim Apple have 100% of the profit (which also isn't true), you can't add other companies negative profits to the share.

          Well, profits are revenue - expenses. So, if you add up all the revenues and subtract all the expenses for all the companies, the profit of the industry is less than what Apple made from it.

          Calling it "more than 100%" illustrates that point quite well.

        • Your maths is wrong, even if you use upper case to emphasise your belief.

          They aren't adding other companies negative profits to the share. They are adding all companies profits (positive and negative) to the size of the market.

          If Apple are making more profits than the whole of the industry added together, then they do indeed have >100% of the profits. The maths doesn't change just because you don't like percentages larger than 100.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        This is actually incorrect. If you go to the original IBD article, rather than reading the shitty blog post that links to it, you'll see this is what the original source ACTUALLY says:

        BMO Capital Markets analyst Tim Long estimates that Apple accounted for 103.6% of smartphone industry operating profits in the third quarter. Its share is over 100% because other vendors lost money in the business, resulting in Apple having more smartphone profit than the industry netted overall. In the year-earlier period, A

      • In previous years Apple and Samsung accounted for the majority of profits in the smartphone category. Now that Samsung has sunk itself, not only with exploding mobile devices but also exploding washing machines, the only profitable firm is Apple.

        The larger than 100% number is because most firms operate at a loss. For example, one can easily be 200% more productive than a very lazy coworker.

        But how can you ever account for having over 100% of the total productivity? They said total profits. Which means that Apple made more profit than there was profit available. That's what the sentence literally means. That is impossible. It's like giving 110% effort. You cannot give more effort than all of the effort you possess.

        • Which means that Apple made more profit than there was profit available.

          That's your misunderstanding. There isn't an available profit, from which each company can take. It's not a pie.

          • Which means that Apple made more profit than there was profit available.

            That's your misunderstanding. There isn't an available profit, from which each company can take. It's not a pie.

            Total profits is a pie. It's a fixed number. it's in the past, it's already said and done. Just like productivity. It already happened. You can't have more of something that is already measured than was measured. It's impossible. When you compare it to previous measurements then you can say "We had 200% growth" and it makes sense. You could also spend 105% of your budget - those are all things that are possible to exceed 100% on. This is a finite measurement.

            • Nope. You've certainly got the wrong end of the stick. The total industry profits are calculated by adding up each individual company profits. Individual company profits are not taken FROM the industry total. There is no limit on what each company can make in profit. The sky is the limit.

    • Re:150% Sure (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 04, 2016 @03:12PM (#53214883)

      Sure they can. If they make $2bn but all their competitors collectively lose $1bn, then the profits for the entire industry are $1bn and Apple have taken 200% of the industry's profits.

      • Re:150% Sure (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Milharis ( 2523940 ) on Friday November 04, 2016 @03:41PM (#53215069)

        So if their competitors lost $3bn, they have taken -200% of the industry's profits?

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          Yeah. That's how math works. -200% of negative profit is a good thing.

        • by jbolden ( 176878 )

          Sort of you have a math error it should be -50% and that number actually makes sense.

          In your scenario: industry profits = $1b - $3b = $-2b.
          Apple profit $1b = -50% of $-2b.

          or flipping the negative
          industry losses = $2b.
          Apple's loss = $-1b = -50% of $2b.

          A negative profit is a loss and visa versa.

        • by wwalker ( 159341 )

          Math is hard, let's go shopping!

      • Re:150% Sure (Score:5, Insightful)

        by rsmith-mac ( 639075 ) on Friday November 04, 2016 @03:41PM (#53215071)

        Sure they can. If they make $2bn but all their competitors collectively lose $1bn, then the profits for the entire industry are $1bn and Apple have taken 200% of the industry's profits.

        Except that Apple's money doesn't then go to anyone else to offset their losses. Economically speaking, these are independent events.

        Apple made all the money. But Samsung didn't lose Apple's money. So counting their losses against Apple's profits is harebrained.

        • It's 50% warmer today in Australia than it is in Britain. These are independent facts. But the comparison is still interesting.

          (Made up fact.)

      • by Curate ( 783077 )
        If Apple makes $2bn and all their competitors collectively lose $2bn, then what % of the industry's profits does Apple take?
  • The notion that a company captures more than 100% of an industry's profits due to an interim loss at its competitors only makes sense in the wasteland of internet clickbaits.
  • This scenario isn't really a new thing, for several years now Apple and Samsung have taken all the profits and yes been over 100% combined. Very few companies have been profitable with Android phones.

    What I can't understand is why there hasn't yet been a massive consolidation of Android phone makers or a large number of them giving up on it.

    How can the same companies pump millions in year after year and stay at it?

    I know Microsoft used to pay companies to make their phones, is Google doing something similar

    • Re:Consolidation (Score:5, Interesting)

      by BigBuckHunter ( 722855 ) on Friday November 04, 2016 @03:12PM (#53214881)

      How are they doing this so long without profit?

      In the case of Samsung, they are in a position where they make a number of components for the iPhone. So when Apple wins, Samsung gets paid. When Apple looses, Samsung gets paid.

    • This is my exact question as well.

      I feel like there is something fundamental that I am missing here.

      I mean, love them or hate them, Apple has raised the bar on phones. There is a fairly high expectation for phones to be well designed, fast, light and feature rich.

      It is not an easy thing to do. Yet here we are with dozens of manufacturers in the game, each with their own offering.

      Are none of them making a profit on their phone divisions? This seems to be what I keep hearing but it just seems unreasonable to

    • How can the same companies pump millions in year after year and stay at it?

      Diversification mostly. Are there any Smartphone vendors that have done this which haven't been in some other business, or even some entirely different industry?

      The Xbox also made a loss for many years, made possible by a waterfall of cash from other divisions.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      That's a very good question, isn't it? They must be making money in some way other than selling phones. Some way that makes it worth their while to sell phones at a loss.

  • I believe the business strategy is called "DFU" (Don't Fuck Up).. All you have to do is release slightly OK products that don't kill your customers and wait for your competitors' greed, ineptitude, and arrogance to do them in....

    Thank goodness Samsung isn't a US corporation, otherwise my tax money would be bailing them out.
  • Lets drag whoever produced those numbers out into the parking lot and have them shot.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I concur 105.5% ...

  • I just bought my first smartphone, an "old" Samsung S6, and I love it. I bought it to fly my Mavic Pro if DJI ever ships it to me, and best of all, it's NOT AN APPLE PRODUCT!
  • My iPhone 7, and am loving it. I miss the headphone jack and the lack of firestarting ability - not at all.
  • When the reality distortion field starts affecting basic mathematics, you know you're in real trouble.

  • Invention (Score:4, Informative)

    by RogueWarrior65 ( 678876 ) on Friday November 04, 2016 @08:49PM (#53216761)

    Invention, my dear friends, is 93 percent perspiration, 6 percent electricity, 4 percent evaporation and 2 percent butterscotch ripple.

  • Well, it does. Slashdot will repeat most any rediculousky indefensible numbers.

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