Samsung Electronics maintained its status as the world’s leading TV vendor with a record market share in the first quarter, a report showed on Tuesday, as the tech giant posted robust growth on the back of its QLED and large TVs.
Samsung represented 32.9 percent of the global TV market in terms of sales revenue in the January-March period, its largest share for a first quarter, according to data from industry researcher Omdia.
Samsung was followed by its South Korean rival LG Electronics with 19.2 percent and Japan’s Sony Corp. with 8 percent.
Samsung, which has been the world’s top TV manufacturer since 2006, said its strategy to focus on premium QLED and large-size TVs once again helped the company post brisk sales amid the pandemic.
Global QLED TV sales reached 2.68 million in the first quarter, up 74.3 per cent from a year earlier, and Samsung accounted for 2.01 million units.
With the launch of its new Neo QLED TV, Samsung said its QLED TV sales will top 10 million units this year. Last year, the company sold 7.79 million QLED TVs, reports Yonhap news agency.
In the premium TV segment, which refers to TVs priced above $2,500, Samsung led with a market share of 46.6 percent in terms of revenue, followed by LG with 24.5 percent and Sony with 17.6 percent.
The company also had the dominant position in the 80-inch or larger TV sector with a market share of 52.4 percent.
The worldwide TV market in the first quarter grew 9.9 percent on-year to 51.22 million units as pent-up demand continued, according to Omdia. By revenue, it expanded to $27.3 billion, up 32.8 percent from a year ago.
Omdia data showed LG also enjoyed brisk sales in the fast-growing OLED TV sector in the first quarter.
LG’s OLED TV shipments increased 116 percent on-year to 792,000 units in the first three months of 2021, its best performance for a first quarter. The global OLED TV market in the first quarter expanded more than 90 percent on-year to 1.19 million units.
The company said the average selling price (ASP) of its OLED TV products reached $1,996.30, which is more than four times larger than LCD TVs’ ASP of $498.70.
Omdia predicted the global OLED TV market will reach 5.8 million units this year, up from 3.65 million units last year. It expected OLED TVs to represent 10 percent of the global TV market this year in terms of revenue.