Canon sold almost half all cameras made in 2023

Richard CR

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Dec 27, 2017
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We reported earlier this month that the data from Techno Systems Research was released, and now all the market data is published for all to see.


 
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Poor Nikon, no wonder they are realeasing so many 600mm wild life lenses....in the hope to catch the market and sell a few more camera bodies as a consequence.
I think a similar statement on mirrorless lens sales would be informative too. Canon makes way more profit on lens sales than camera bodies.
So I wonder who sells the most lenses? I know that Canon's EF lensese are still selling very well for Canon.
 
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The only caveat I would bring to this is that we are talking of shipments, not sell out, similar to what CIPA reports monthly. I wonder what happens from the retailer to the end user? Lots of back ordered products but also some heavy discounts across the board from all manufacturers, so I don\'t know if the dynamics are the same between Sell-in and sell-out.
 
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Quote frome the article: "But let's talk about this. Sony had a commanding 5-year mirrorless lead."

Sony release their first mirrorless camera (Nex Series) in 2010, Canon followed with the EOS M in 2012, so it is only a two year lead. Since these numbers look at the camera market overall IMO it makes sense to take APS-C cameras into consideration.

If you want to compare the time between the first a7 with the EOS R, then only FF MILC market share should be taken into consideration, where Sony claims first place (1). Since this claim is apparently based on Sony`s internal numbers it should be taken with a grain of salt. But I think it is safe to say that the race is way closer in that segment compared to the overall camera market.


I must have misunderstood the text quoted above. Damn language barrier!
 
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The difference is even more impressive when you see the absolute numbers from 2023. Source: DCLife article posted by @Navism.

Mirrorless camera shipments 2023
  1. Canon: 1.96 million units ↑
  2. Sony: 1.53 million units ↑
  3. Nikon: 630,000 units ↑
  4. Fujifilm: 380,000 units ↑
  5. Panasonic … 140,000 units →
  6. OM Digital … 120,000 units ↓
Digital SLR shipments 2023
  1. Canon … 920,000 units ↓
  2. Nikon … 130,000 units ↓
  3. Ricoh Imaging … 10,000 units →
Compact digital camera shipments 2023
  1. Sony: 470,000 units ↓
  2. Canon … 460,000 units ↓
  3. Panasonic … 120,000 units ↓
  4. OM Digital … 60,000 units ↓
  5. Nikon … 50,000 units ↓
  6. Fujifilm … 50,000 units
  7. Ricoh Imaging … 50,000 units →
All manufacturers below Nikon have tough times ahead. I can image Nikon seeking a profitable niche: Canon shipped more DSLR’s than Nikon’s mirrorless, DSLR and compact shipments combined.

Google translated link to DCLife
 
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We reported earlier this month that the data from Techno Systems Research was released, and now all the market data is published for all to see.


Trying to read this site and forum, navigating video ads by pressing the tiniest of "x" just to try and get rid of them up and down my phone screen is getting to the point where I won't bother with this site anymore. This is getting rediculous
 
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Another interesting data point is that the average unit price of DSLRs shipped in 2023 was $336, while the average unit price of MILCs shipped in 2023 was $831. That suggests that unit sales are still being driven largely by APS-C cameras (no surprise about that) though ratio of FF to APS-C has been trending upward for the past few years.
 
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Another interesting data point is that the average unit price of DSLRs shipped in 2023 was $336, while the average unit price of MILCs shipped in 2023 was $831. That suggests that unit sales are still being driven largely by APS-C cameras (no surprise about that) though ratio of FF to APS-C has been trending upward for the past few years.
With the quality and price point of the R8 and RF non-L primes, I wonder if Canon will lean towards that direction or improve the APS-C bodies. You’d think that having a usable electronic shutter would be a big selling point for crop bodies, but only the most expensive and hi-res body has one, and that is borderline unusable!
 
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"the industry as a whole still has to figure out how to sell more cameras in 2025 and beyond."

I think the industry has pretty much given up on that. They just want unit sales to stabilize at the current level, rather than going down more.
 
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"the industry as a whole still has to figure out how to sell more cameras in 2025 and beyond."

I think the industry has pretty much given up on that. They just want unit sales to stabilize at the current level, rather than going down more.

that literally won't happen though people stop upgrading after a while.
 
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Quote frome the article: "But let's talk about this. Sony had a commanding 5-year mirrorless lead."

Sony release their first mirrorless camera (Nex Series) in 2010, Canon followed with the EOS M in 2012, so it is only a two year lead. Since these numbers look at the camera market overall IMO it makes sense to take APS-C cameras into consideration.

If you want to compare the time between the first a7 with the EOS R, then only FF MILC market share should be taken into consideration, where Sony claims first place (1). Since this claim is apparently based on Sony`s internal numbers it should be taken with a grain of salt. But I think it is safe to say that the race is way closer in that segment compared to the overall camera market.

(1) https://petapixel.com/2024/09/18/so...t-in-the-full-frame-mirrorless-camera-market/

Sony is famous for hedging their numbers not to mention your data point "Sony says it achieved the number one market share based on internal data from the 2023 fiscal year."

snorts.

The point still stands really - Sony had an overwhelming lead - what the market considered an unbeatable amount of momentum when Canon and Nikon pivoted. and all they got from it was 26% - a net change of 6% - mostly at the expense of Panasonic and olympus.
 
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The point still stands really - Sony had an overwhelming lead - what the market considered an unbeatable amount of momentum when Canon and Nikon pivoted. and all they got from it was 26% - a net change of 6% - mostly at the expense of Panasonic and olympus.
Dog people marry dog people, cat people marry cat people, and Canon owners buy Canon cameras. It still makes me laugh when people chuff on about everyone switching to Sony for more MP or to Nikon for 'mid-range' ($3-4K) PF telephoto lenses.
 
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The only caveat I would bring to this is that we are talking of shipments, not sell out, similar to what CIPA reports monthly. I wonder what happens from the retailer to the end user? Lots of back ordered products but also some heavy discounts across the board from all manufacturers, so I don\'t know if the dynamics are the same between Sell-in and sell-out.
But why would they ship cameras if they were not selling? I always find it silly when people post these arguments.
 
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Sony is famous for hedging their numbers not to mention your data point "Sony says it achieved the number one market share based on internal data from the 2023 fiscal year."

snorts.

The point still stands really - Sony had an overwhelming lead - what the market considered an unbeatable amount of momentum when Canon and Nikon pivoted. and all they got from it was 26% - a net change of 6% - mostly at the expense of Panasonic and olympus.
Yes, thats what I said, that Sony numbers need a grain of salt. And your point may or may not still stand.

But the claim of 5 years ahead in mirrorless is simply untrue, that´s all.


Edit: No longer relevant
 
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