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Apple Overtakes Samsung After 14 Years – iPhone 17 Takes the Crown

Anderson Liam
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The global smartphone market has long resembled a stable universe where positions shift slowly and leaders rarely fall. Yet 2025 marks a rare break in that order. For the first time in fourteen years, Samsung is set to lose the crown – and Apple, driven by a mix of product strategy, macroeconomic tailwinds and an evolving consumer base, is preparing to take the lead. At NewsTrackerToday, we see this moment not as an anomaly, but as the beginning of a structural shift that could reshape the industry for the rest of the decade.

Analyst projections indicate that Apple will ship around 243 million iPhones in 2025, overtaking Samsung’s expected 235 million units. That translates into a global market share of roughly 19.4% for Apple and 18.7% for Samsung. The gap is narrow, but symbolically powerful: it shows a market gravitating toward a brand that increasingly defines the premium segment. As we note at NewsTrackerToday, “leadership in shipments reflects more than volume – it reflects conviction about the future demand curve.”

Much of Apple’s momentum comes from the iPhone 17 series, launched in September. Its early performance has been exceptional: U.S. sales in the first four weeks came in 12% higher than the iPhone 16 cycle (excluding the 16e), while China – a more competitive and politically sensitive market – saw an 18% year-over-year increase.

Financial markets expert Liam Anderson describes this advantage succinctly: “Apple is one of the few companies that can turn a product refresh into a macroeconomic event. In the premium layer, the brand alone drives the upgrade cycle.”

China’s contribution has been especially striking. During the country’s major shopping festivals, Apple was responsible for nearly a quarter of all smartphone sales – a performance so strong that, without Apple, the sector would have slipped into decline. This signals that Apple is not merely weathering competition from Chinese OEMs; it is outperforming them in the segment where perception, loyalty and ecosystem carry the most weight.

Apple is also benefiting from powerful timing. The smartphone market is entering the “COVID-era replacement wave,” where millions of devices purchased during 2020–2021 are reaching the end of their natural life span. As we note at NewsTrackerToday, “this cycle rivals the scale of the upgrade wave triggered by the first edge-to-edge iPhones – and may exceed it.”

One of the less visible but highly consequential drivers is the secondary market. Between 2023 and mid-2025, consumers purchased around 358 million used iPhones, creating one of the largest active user funnels the industry has ever seen. Corporate strategy analyst Isabella Moretti frames it simply: “Apple’s strength isn’t just selling new devices – it’s building an upgrade ladder that users willingly climb. The second-hand market is not a side effect; it’s a strategic multiplier.”

Samsung, meanwhile, is facing a different reality. While it retains significant scale and manufacturing breadth, its strongest territories – the mid-range and entry-level markets – are under growing pressure from Chinese brands offering aggressive pricing and feature-heavy devices. This dynamic limits Samsung’s path back to the top, especially as Apple consolidates its grip on the high end. In contrast, Apple benefits from the absence of a truly formidable competitor in the premium tier outside a handful of niche players.

Macro conditions are also favoring Apple. A softer U.S. dollar, easing tariff risks and temporary geopolitical de-escalation have helped stabilize the company’s supply chain and expand its reach in emerging markets. These factors strengthen pricing power and allow Apple to maintain margins while increasing unit shipments in regions that historically leaned toward Android.

Looking ahead, multiple research firms expect Apple to retain its global lead at least through 2029. The reasoning is straightforward: Apple is widening its portfolio in both directions. A more affordable iPhone 17e is expected next year, alongside Apple’s first foldable device – an entry that could rejuvenate a form factor still waiting for its mainstream moment.

Further out, a major design overhaul planned for 2027, paired with a revamped Siri and deeper AI-driven features, may create yet another powerful upgrade cycle. At NewsTrackerToday, we believe this marks the beginning of a transition to “intelligent smartphones,” where the value shifts from hardware specs to behavioral algorithms and ecosystem coherence.

All of this is unfolding against a backdrop of slow global market recovery. After years of contraction, smartphone shipments are rising only modestly, with growth measured in single digits. Yet Apple is expanding faster than the market itself – a sign that the company is not rising with the tide but pulling ahead in spite of it.

Taken together, the story of 2025 is not merely about Apple replacing Samsung at the top – it is about Apple entering a phase of structural dominance. With a massive installed base, a powerful upgrade engine, a thriving second-hand ecosystem and a product lineup optimized for both emerging and premium markets, Apple is positioned to extend its lead well into the second half of the decade.

At News Tracker Today, our assessment is clear: Samsung can recover only by strengthening its true differentiators – innovation in advanced form factors, camera leadership and targeted regional strategies – while defending the mid-range against intensifying Chinese competition. Apple, on the other hand, must maintain its delicate balance between premium identity and expanded accessibility through the growing “e-series.”

For investors, the takeaway is simple: the companies that control not just device sales but the entire user lifecycle – from entry-level refurbished phones to top-tier flagships – are the ones shaping the next era of the smartphone market. And for consumers, the implication is equally clear: Apple’s ecosystem gravity is increasing, and switching platforms will only become more expensive, both financially and habitually, as the decade progresses.

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