Chinese smartphone makers Xiaomi and Transsion slashed their 2026 shipment targets as a global memory chip shortage tightens supply chains, signalling potential ripple effects across Africa’s fast-growing mobile market, according to a report by SCMP.
The report, citing industry sources, revealed that Xiaomi has cut its shipment forecast by between 10 and 70 million units, while Transsion, Africa’s dominant smartphone vendor, has reduced its target by 30 to 45 million units from earlier projections.
The development underscores mounting pressure on smartphone manufacturers as rising memory costs and constrained supply reshape global production strategies.
Memory crunch reshapes global smartphone outlook
The cuts align with broader industry forecasts pointing to a slowdown in the global smartphone market.
Research firm Omdia projects that global smartphone shipments will decline by about 7% in 2026, driven by tightening memory supply and geopolitical pressures.
At the core of the disruption is a structural shift in the semiconductor industry. Major memory producers, including Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron, are increasingly prioritising high-margin chips for artificial intelligence (AI) systems, leaving less capacity for consumer electronics.
This shift has triggered a supply squeeze, pushing up component costs and forcing smartphone vendors to either absorb higher expenses or scale back production.
Africa’s smartphone market faces direct impact
For Africa, the implications are significant. Transsion, which owns brands such as TECNO, Infinix and itel, commands a dominant share of the continent’s smartphone market, particularly in the entry-level and mid-range segments.
These segments are the most vulnerable to rising component costs. According to industry data, lower-priced smartphones, often below $200, are already experiencing margin pressure as memory now accounts for a larger share of total production costs.
As a result, African consumers could face:
- Higher smartphone prices
- Reduced availability of entry-level devices
- Slower upgrade cycles
This aligns with recent trends in Nigeria, where smartphone prices are already projected to rise sharply due to component cost increases and currency pressures.
From supply shortage to availability crisis
While the issue is often described as a chip shortage, analysts argue the challenge is more about allocation and prioritisation than absolute scarcity.
The surge in AI demand, particularly from data centres, has effectively redirected memory supply away from smartphones. Each AI server requires significantly more memory than a mobile device, intensifying competition for limited resources.
This explains why even large manufacturers are struggling to secure adequate supply despite overall semiconductor production capacity remaining relatively stable.
Strategic shift by smartphone makers
In response, smartphone vendors are adjusting strategies across multiple fronts:
- Reducing shipment targets to align with supply realities
- Simplifying product configurations to cut costs
- Focusing on higher-margin models where pricing power is stronger
Premium brands like Apple and Samsung are expected to weather the disruption better due to stronger supply chain relationships and vertical integration.
However, brands heavily reliant on volume-driven, low-cost devices, such as Transsion, face greater exposure.
What this means for Nigeria and beyond
Nigeria, one of Africa’s largest smartphone markets, sits at the intersection of these global shifts. With rising inflation and currency volatility already affecting consumer purchasing power, any further increase in device prices could dampen demand.
At the same time, reduced shipment volumes may slow digital inclusion efforts, particularly in underserved communities where affordable smartphones remain the primary gateway to the internet.
Smartphone Outlook for Africa
While some analysts expect memory supply pressures to ease in the second half of 2026, risks remain. If AI demand continues to absorb semiconductor capacity, the smartphone market could face prolonged constraints.
For Africa, the situation highlights a deeper challenge: dependence on global supply chains for critical digital infrastructure.
As the industry evolves, stakeholders across the continent, from policymakers to telecom operators, may need to rethink strategies around local manufacturing, supply chain resilience, and digital affordability.
The decision by Xiaomi and Transsion to cut 2026 targets is more than a supply chain adjustment, it is a signal that the global tech ecosystem is being reshaped by AI, with Africa’s smartphone market directly in the line of impact.






