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Camera sales, series 3
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    Data got via CIPA .

    sales.jpg
    800 x 399 - 100K
    sales1.jpg
    800 x 406 - 97K
    sales2.jpg
    800 x 395 - 107K
  • 1 Reply sorted by
  • Some interesting addition

    Western Europe's photo market lost 10% in the first half of 2013 compared with the same period in 2012, according to GfK.

    Basic compact cameras with little zoom capability, in particular, are facing competition from smartphones with their camera functions. Sales were down 40% in the first half of 2013. However, high-end digital camera sales increased, in part quite substantially, depending on their target group and intended area of application. For example, full-frame single-lens reflex cameras were up 26%. With a high average selling price of EUR2,245 (US$2,966), they accounted for 14% of all cameras sold in terms of value and had a significantly favorable impact on retail sales. They just about make up for the falling sales of single-lens reflex cameras with smaller sensors [fewer pixels] (negative 10%) and compact mirror-less system cameras (negative 8%). Meanwhile, interchangeable lens system cameras now account for around half of all camera sales.

    More advanced fixed-lens cameras are also doing well. These are cameras with larger image sensors, which registered a sales increase of around 7%. Selling at steadily high prices of around EUR450. The boost from high-zoom cameras with 20x optical zoom and more is even more apparent, with sales improving by 44%. This segment accounts for more than one in every three euros spent on fixed-lens cameras. Sales of slim travel models which are 4cm and thinner are growing particularly fast. Average price level in the high-zoom range remained steady in the first half of the year at around EUR250. Between them, these segments accounted for more than 25% of total camera sales and more than 50% of fixed lens sales up to June 2013.

    What happens in single-lens reflex and mirror-less cameras very much affects what happens to sales in the interchangeable lens market. Sales here were up 2% in the first half of 2013. In value terms, they already account for 22% of the photo market (cameras and lenses together).

    By June 2013, one in seven cameras sold could already share pictures via an integrated WLAN.

    Via: http://www.digitimes.com/news/a20130905PR213.html