Meanwhile, the first quarter saw a decline in smart and basic watches.
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Richard Platt
onto Wearable Tech and the Internet of Things (Iot) May 31, 2020 4:52 AM
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Worldwide shipments of wearables grew more than 29% year over year in the first quarter of 2020, with total device volume hitting 72.6 million units, according to a Thursday report by market research firm IDC. Much of that increase was fueled by growth in hearables and wristbands, as smart and basic watches saw a decline. Meanwhile, the COVID-19 pandemic had a negative impact on the supply of smart and basic watches, many of which share components and resources with phones and PCs, which were also impacted in the first quarter, IDC said. Still, some vendors, including Garmin and Huawei, saw notable growth, given that they don't rely as heavily on Chinese markets and have been expanding more into the US, Europe and other parts of Asia. Apple was again the top wearables company, with 29.3% share and 21.2 million units shipped. While the Apple Watch experienced setbacks due to issues in the supply chain, the Beats and Airpods lineup made up for that decline.
Xiaomi landed in second place, with 7.3 million wristband and watch shipments. Samsung came in third, with its hearables business making up 74% of its total shipments during the first quarter, up from 58.9% in the first quarter of last year. That's largely thanks to the success of its latest generation of Galaxy Buds and Buds Plus, which shipped over 4 million units in the first quarter of 2020.