Tag Archives: Mobile

Samsung building

Is Samsung Set For Greater Losses?

Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) has recently experienced a $28-billion loss in a stretch of only six weeks, and the stock’s most accurate forecaster expects the drop to deepen as Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Chinese competitors bite off greater chinks of the market.

Samsung, which is based in Suwon, South Korea, saw its shares plummet 13 percent since 29th November, making it the quickest market-capitalisation losing company worldwide. According to Adnaan Ahmad, the Brerenberg analyst with the most accurate and best-returning forecasts over the last twelve months, the stock is set to decline another 11 percent.

The last quarter of 2013 marked the first quarterly decline for the word’s largest smartphone maker, ending a nine quarter stretch of increases, losing customers not only to Apple’s iPhones, but also to budget solution by Chinese makers. Despite bulls’ expectation for a rebound following the drop that brought the stock to its lowest level in three years, Ahmad anticipates more selling as Samsung’s profit margins shrink.

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morning-coffee

Has the way we shop changed forever?

The Monday after Thanksgiving in the US, labelled as Cyber Monday, is billed as one of the busiest online commerce days of the year. This year, however, it is spilling into the rest of the holiday season as more consumers use mobile devices to shop when and where they please. Equipped with tablets and smartphones, shoppers are ordering online over a longer period, data from ComScore Inc. show, and one third of average monthly traffic for leading retailers is from smartphones and tablets. As a result, more and more stores are offering holiday deals that can reach consumers through these devices. The incentive to the shoppers – apart from the practicality of using your phone to buy stuff – is offers giving them an added discount if they order from their mobile applications. Amazon and Ebay, the world’s largest online retailers, as well as other retailers, are taking advantage of the smartphone industry to create online promotions and mobile apps to attract tech-savvy gift buyers, over the many weeks leading up to the holidays.

The holiday season is crucial for companies such as Amazon which depends on people buying gifts in the lead up to Christmas to fuel its biggest-revenue quarter. The trend is accelerating as commerce on tablets and smartphones grew twice as fast in the third quarter as desktop online spending. According to the National Retail Federation, online holiday sales should increase as much as 15 percent to $82 billion this year. As more purchasing happens over the internet, it won’t be surprising if e-commerce eventually completely overtakes shopping in real-life stores.

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morning-coffee

Forgot Your Wallet? Pay By Phone Instead!

Executives from PayPal recently met to discuss the future of the massive market for retail and restaurant payments with a reporter who then paid for lunch. Without opening his wallet, the reporter entered a four-digit number printed at the bottom of the bill into a PayPal app on his smartphone. An itemised bill appeared on the screen. One click later, without needing to call a waiter, the bill was paid. In recent years, the use of plastic has gradually taken over cash and coins. For all their relative simplicity, credit cards still require busy sales and service staff to take cards bearing a customer’s personal information to special terminals and hand back receipts that need signatures and further processing. For the past decade, payment companies have been trying to figure out how to take advantage of mobile devices to make the process easier and more secure.

A new wave of mobile payments has already begun to gather momentum. At Starbucks, for example, customers can now download the company’s app to their phone, load it with a credit or debit card, then pay at most of the coffee chain’s 11,437 U.S. locations by opening the app and waving their phone under a scanner. The company says more than 11 percent of payments in the U.S. and Canada are now made with mobile devices. Companies interested in reaching mobile shoppers are quickly jumping on board this new development. Apple and Google are working to turn their mobile software into popular one-stop wallets that could usurp Visa and MasterCard as go-to forms of payment at brick-and-mortar stores, generating fees for them instead. Before you know, consumers will be conducting many transactions through phones, without juggling a mass of different apps, a scanner or a photograph of a barcode and in-store checkout transactions will be a thing of the past.

Forgot your wallet? No worries, your phone will do nicely!

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Nokia Bouncing Back

Nokia Bouncing Back?

The heavily criticized Nokia CEO, Stephen Elop has been able to turn the ailing mobile giant’s luck with well-timed and executed changes, and on Friday the hard work paid off as Nokia’s share jumped 18 percent in the Helsinki stock exchange signaling a shift that might restore the company’s status as a market maker after several years of decline.

After massive layouts last June, I wrote a piece predicting a gloomy future for the Finnish flagship. Astonishingly, there are real signs that Nokia is bouncing back. The world of technology coupled with top-notch marketing can work wonders and usually the Finns, who excel in producing quality products, but fail in marketing, seem to have managed to persuade the younger generations that Nokia is still hip and not just a phone for toddlers to play with and geriatrics to step on.
A report at forbes.com makes the argument that Apple is no longer the gadget of choice for teenagers.

“The signs that youngest smartphone audience has cooled on Apple have been steadily accumulating over the past few months. Apple, for instance, dropped several spots or remained flat on several teen brand opinion polls, including marketing agency’s Smarty Pants’ Young Love survey. And while 67% of affluent teens still say they intend to purchase an iPhone as their next upgrade, reports Piper Jaffray, Samsung pulls in second with a strong 22%. Perhaps more importantly is the fact that it was unthinkable a mere 12 months ago that any teen would prefer any phone to an iPhone if given the option,” Forbes’ Larissa Faw wrote.

Although the mobile phone market is no longer a game of only a few players, Nokia will face tough competition from constantly improving Samsung and even ailing HTC and RIM, but perhaps Apple’s downfall is Nokia’s silver lining.

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