Kuo: AirPods 3 Will Not Launch Until Q3 2021
Apple’s third generation AirPods are set to begin production in the third quarter of 2021, according to a new report from analyst Ming-Chi Kuo. That means they won’t launch this month as rumored.
Recently, we’ve seen numerous reports allegedly leak the design of Apple’s AirPods 3 ahead of a possible event this month. Highly accurate leaker Kang also teased that they are ready to ship; however, a launch date wasn’t specified.
Although Kuo previously predicted a 1H21 launch, the analyst now expects AirPods 3 to arrive in Q3. Kuo says AirPods shipments will drop 25% year over year from Q1 to Q3, reaching 55 units. If AirPods 3 demand is better than expected, Q4 shipments will remain flat at 23 million units.
Overall, AirPods shipments for this year are predicted to decline to 78 million units, down from 90 million last year. Notably, Kuo says that AirPods Max are providing ‘limited help’ to AirPods shipments reaching annual levels of just one million units.
If AirPods 2 will go to end-of-life after AirPods 3’s mass production, we estimate AirPods 3, AirPods Pro, AirPods 2, and AirPods Max will account for about 40%, 28%, 31%, and 1% of total shipments, respectively, in 2021. If AirPods 2 will continue production after mass production of AirPods 3, we estimate AirPods 3, AirPods Pro, AirPods 2, and AirPods Max will account for about 32%, 28%, 39%, and 1% of total shipments in 2021, respectively.
Kuo believes the drop in AirPods shipments are due to an increase in competition.
The competitive advantage of Apple’s products lies in providing integration of the “hardware, software, and service” ecosystem, not just hardware. The iPhone, for example, has seen its market share decline due to the rapid growth of the smartphone market, but it has been able to maintain shipment growth because of the strong ecosystem of the App Store and developers. We believe that Siri is the core of AirPods’ software and service ecosystem, but since Siri’s competitive advantage is not significant, the gap between AirPods’ leading edge and its competitors’ shrinks due to a lack of protection from the ecosystem as competitors gradually improve their user experience and launch lower-price strategies at the same time. We believe that HomePod and HomePod mini shipments were significantly lower than expected for the same reason.
Although AirPods offer quick pairing and fast switch, competitors have ‘gradually offset’ these advantages with improved user experiences and lower prices.
In terms of high quality, while AirPods Pro’s low latency is about 50% improvement vs. AirPods 1 and 20% improvement vs. AirPods 2, and it offers active noise cancellation, sales results show that consumers are not very willing to spend more than US$100 to buy the selling points of AirPods Pro.
Kuo says that if Apple wants to improve AirPods shipments in the future, hardware innovation like health management functionality is necessary to differentiate the earbuds from similar products offered by competitors.
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[via MacRumors]