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Second-hand and Refurbished Phone Market Takes Flight Amid Inflation Hike (theregister.com) 31

More and more cash-strapped people are opting to buy second hand and refurbished handsets in these tougher economic times with sales of used and refurbished devices estimated to have passed 282 million in 2022. From a report: The unit growth for those 12 months is some 11.5 percent higher than the prior year, and IDC number-crunchers have calculated compound annual growth of 10.3 percent until 2026 when shipments are forecast to reach 413.3 million. Anthony Scarsella, research manager with IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Phone Tracker, said the used market grew off the back of a 6.1 percent rebound in sales of new phones in 2021.

"Used devices demonstrate more resilience to market inhibitors than new smartphone sales as consumer appetite remains elevated in many regions," he said. "Attractive price points are critical for growth as cost savings remain the primary benefit," Scarsella added. "However, a high-end inventory struggle due to elongated refresh cycles in the new market has used prices growing 11 percent in 2022." North America was calculated to have shipped 73.5 million smartphones last year with the other 209.1 million devices sold into channels across the rest of the globe.

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Second-hand and Refurbished Phone Market Takes Flight Amid Inflation Hike

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  • I've always wondered... apple and android manufacturers must pull in millions of phones a year. Do they trash them to ensure no loss of new sales? Or do they find their way back into the market? And if so, how? You never see second hand phones for sale on apple.com.
    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday January 11, 2023 @05:12PM (#63200700)

      Many end up in developing countries. I am currently living in the Philippines, and "pre-loved" phone shops are common here.

      • In Brazil it's not so easy: the major shops here only sell new stuff (this is the main reason I buy mobile, when need, from aliexpress/China: a refurbished flagship from few years ago is, normally, much cheaper and better, minding specs, than what you can buy in stores here)
    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      Outlet sales. No advertising, it's just for people who walk into a store and look for them. That way they don't cannibalize sales of new product.

    • I don't know about apple.com, but most, if not all of the carriers sell refurbished phones (in the US.) I bought my first refurbished phone about 5 months ago. Mine is a $15 Samsung, but most people I know who have refurbs have iPhones, because the cost is so high to begin with. Not sure if they got them directly from Apple or the carrier.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        I don't know about apple.com, but most, if not all of the carriers sell refurbished phones (in the US.)

        Apple sells refurb devices as well. In fact, it's linked from their main store page as a way to save some money.

        Refurb Apple stuff is a good deal as you get all new accessories and the warranty is a full like-new warranty instead of a 90 day warranty.

        And if Apple introduces a new device, the old devices it replaces all get shoved into the refurb store, so if you order quickly after that, you will effectiv

        • While never having bought a refurb phone...I have had and bought a couple of refurb items before as that I like a good deal and these would serve the purpose.

          For instance, I'm looking to buy a few year older MacBook Pro, ones I've seen from Mashable, etc..for like $250.

          They aren't the latest and greatest by far...but I'm buying it solely to be a computer hooked to a camera on my camera stand to run Capture One tethered to my camera I used to scan film.

          Would be great for that.

          But other than this, the art

          • The article talks about global figures. Food prices have doubled over 2 years in many places, for example Nigeria. I imagine food was already their main expense and people don't have much cushion in the budget.

            In the US, they've had to hype up how "bad" the economy is in 2022 due to the election.

    • I've always wondered... apple and android manufacturers must pull in millions of phones a year. Do they trash them to ensure no loss of new sales?

      For Apple at least, they have an obscure corner of the website devoted to returb products, which includes laptops and phones and pretty much all devices they sell.

      It's not a huge discount over new but they also come with a warranty backed by Apple which is nice.

      Things they don't consider good enough for refurb, Apple recycles for raw materials. They've stated be

  • S21 owner here. Purchased after market for 50% of the S22 price.

    I did increase my "monthly" phone cost from under $10 ($250 phone for 30 months) to probably about $17 ($500 phone over 30 months) a few months ago.

    Swappa FTW.

    The warranty costs more, and we have multiple backup phones in case any of our primaries break (including a burner # that's in my car for tracking its location - it's a Kia...).

    • I do! (OnePlus 5T owner here, buyed at the end of last year: it runs Android 13 great! [lineageos.org])
      • by maitas ( 98290 )

        I run a Samsung Galaxy S5 for years with Lineage OS. Some apps showed a warning when installed in Lineage OS (Whastapp, etc.) and some fail to install at all due to Lineage, but I always found an alternative app that I was able to install on Lineage OS.

        • I have one (with lineageos), and used it for years - I think the issue is with the "tiny" 2GB of RAM: Android kill process when it "need resources" (even the camera app made my banking app break sometimes... - up to Android 7 or 8 it was perfectly fine, tough)
          • The softwares/applications today are too resource hungry (mainly because there are plenty of them, normally...): it favours planned obsolescence (when using old devices you experience a lot of this... looks like it's telling you: "buy a new device!")
    • My most recent buy was used as I don't need a warranty. I keep my phones many years as they're now such capable appliances I don't have a use for a high end new phone. (I have computers for that stuff.)

      I practice your multiple backup idea because being only one-deep on such vital devices is inconvenient and silly.

  • Thanks to the Android monopoly on non Apple phones there is no competitive market for updates, unless you're on a small list of models that can get unofficial roms, and these models go for a premium on the used market.
    • >Thanks to the Android monopoly on non Apple phones there is no competitive market for updates,

      Steve, is that you? I thought you were dead.

    • Flash aftermarket ROMs: problem solved! (android only) #AppleSux
  • A cellphone, if the powers that be get their way.
  • Just assumed everyone on /. knew about Swappa

    • It's a bit odd but no surprise.

      Slashdot quit being a tech site long ago and most people are helpless and generally unaware of how to buy used electronics efficiently.

  • My, in perfect condition G2 Go Phone is now worthless.
    Nobody is supporting G2.

    So how many second-hand phones will find the same end of life sooner than the buyer thinks?

    G6, G7 G8 anyone?

  • I wanted a tablet that was well-suited for a life of wifi, without any data contract. I ended up with a five year old, refurbished Verizon Ellipsis for less than $60 and I'm pretty pleased. It's faster than my ten year old laptop, which is clearly evident watching video. The tablet remains somewhat responsive while running 1080p video, and doesn't drop many frames except in the first second or two of a video. The old hacked (to run Win10) Chromebook can handle no more than 720p without dropping frames, and

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