AirPods demand is reportedly falling in the face of increased competition from other brands. A supply-chain report says that Apple is ordering suppliers to cut production by somewhere in the 25-30% range.

It says Apple is currently sitting on excess inventory in warehouses …

Nikkei cites multiple unnamed sources.

That’s resulting in discounts being offered to move stock, with a leading Chinese e-commerce platform currently selling AirPods Pro at 25% below the official retail price.

Sources briefed on the matter told Nikkei Asia [that] Apple now expects to make between 75 million and 85 million units for 2021, compared with a previous production forecast of 110 million units.

The downward revision indicates that demand is weakening for AirPods, whose shipments have been growing by double-digit percentages since their introduction in 2016.

“The most significant order reduction is for the second quarter toward the start of the third quarter,” said one of the people familiar with the matter. “The levels of inventory [in warehouses] and in-store stocks of AirPods are currently high … and demand is not as strong as expected.”

If accurate, it’s unlikely that Apple will be too concerned at this stage. The company is still by far the dominant player in the true wireless in-ear headphone market, though its share has been falling for some time. Back in January, Counterpoint estimated that Apple’s market share last year fell from 41% to 29% in the course of nine months.

All the same, Apple’s 29% share is more than twice that of its nearest competitor, Xiaomi, and third-placed Samsung has just 5% of the market.

Apple will likely see a boost in demand when it launches AirPods 3 later this year, though two recent reports say that this isn’t set to happen until Q3. AirPods 3 are expected to look similar to the current-gen AirPods Pro model, but will lack noise cancellation. Additionally, we’re expecting a new, more compact design for AirPods Pro.

Photo by Xiong Yan on Unsplash