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Consumer Electronics Market Hits $683 Billion Trade Value

Global CE Market Insights and Commentary

Globally the Consumer Electronics (CE) market increased in value during 2019, adding just over $3 billion to present a worldwide total of $683 billion in trade value. Shipments across CE product categories totalled almost 4.4 billion units worldwide, representing a growth of 2.7% year-on-year.

“Companies are refining their strategies, aiming to position themselves favourably to maximise opportunities in developing business around connected CE products,” says Simon Forrest, Principal Technology Analyst at Futuresource Consulting. “Difficulties include mitigating limited growth across traditional products, adapting to the steady commoditisation of hardware and, more importantly, offsetting the competitive threat from software-only platforms and online services that are attracting consumers away from traditional CE business. There is a clear move towards companies presenting a portfolio of connected products, each of which are designed to work together and attract consumers to invest in vendor-specific ecosystems.”

Notably, product support is now an expanding problem that vendors must grapple with. “Connected CE products are no longer ‘sell and forget’,” reminds Forrest; “there are challenges in maintaining software upgrades and ensuring lifetime value for products already in the market. Finding the optimum moment to discontinue support without alienating customers or weakening brand value is a delicate proposition.”

Across the product categories, headphones, wearables and smart home posted the strongest growth in value throughout 2019. All other categories contracted in value, with imaging/cameras and video games showing double-digit percentage declines. Meanwhile, the brand landscape changed very little in 2019, with the majority of the top three brands in each product category maintaining strong market share.

While 2019 was a strong year for the Consumer Electronics industry, the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 has altered the outlook significantly. “Some categories such as TVs and laptops performed well in H1 2020 as a result of consumers’ response to lockdown,” says Forrest. “However, in many cases, this is expected to have drawn sales forward from H2, which is likely to be impacted by the economic repercussions.” COVID-19 has contributed to $88 billion being wiped from the overall forecast CE trade value in 2020, in comparison to our pre-COVID-19 forecasts issued last December. The pandemic has dented consumer confidence and disrupted global supply chains. Turbulence across the CE market will persist for several months, with analysis showing a further $66 billion deficit globally in 2021 trade value compared to previous forecasts. “Nevertheless, the market shows resilience and we expect it to rebound reasonably quickly, returning to growth next year and with value largely restored to pre-COVID levels by Q4 2022,” explains Forrest.

Despite the uncertainty and imminent recession across regional economies, the long-term outlook for the Consumer Electronics market remains positive. The market is expected to increase 20% in volume to total 5.2 billion-unit shipments annually worldwide in 2024, with these products contributing an additional $121 billion of trade value globally.

Our Worldwide Consumer Electronics Report published in August 2020. For more information, or to purchase the report, contact Futuresource at info@futuresource-hq.com.

Date Published:

Simon Forrest

About the author

Simon Forrest

As Principal Technology Analyst for Futuresource Consulting, Simon is responsible for identifying and reporting on transformational technologies that have propensity to influence and disrupt market dynamics. A graduate in Computer Science from the University of York, his expertise extends across broadcast television and audio, digital radio, smart home, broadband, Wi-Fi and cellular communication technologies.

He has represented companies across standards groups, including the Audio Engineering Society, DLNA, WorldDAB digital radio, the Digital TV Group (DTG) and Home Gateway Initiative.

Prior to joining Futuresource, Simon held the position of Director of Segment Marketing at Imagination Technologies, promoting development in wireless home audio semiconductors, and Chief Technologist within Pace plc (now Commscope) responsible for technological advancement within the Pay TV industry.

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