Smartphone-makers are in a race to the bottom of India's economic pyramid as they battle for customers in the fast-growing low-end market segment where analysts say opportunities are vast.
India is now the quickest-expanding smartphone market globally and the third-largest market after China and the United States, according to Britain-based consultancy Canalys.
India "is a market that offers huge potential as hundreds of millions of users have yet to upgrade", said Jessica Kwee, an analyst at Canalys.
Sales in the country of 1.25 billion people rose by 84 percent in the quarter to June from a year earlier as users traded up from basic handsets to more sophisticated models, spurred by ever lower prices.
Local and foreign companies alike are sacrificing profit margins to build market share in India, which counts 914 million mobile users, according to government data.
The cheapest smartphones now retail at 2,000 rupees ($33), down from an average 15,000 rupees two years ago.
Technology consultancy IDC India projects annual smartphone sales growth of around 40 percent for the next five years in the price-sensitive nation, home to 33 percent of the world's poor.
"A new entry-level price point is being breached by Indian home-grown vendors in every (financial) quarter," IDC analyst Karan Thakkar said.
Smartphones now hold a 10 percent market share among India's mobile-phone-using population, according to IDC.
That 10 percent figure is widely seen as a "tipping point" -- the moment when buyers start opting for smartphones over other phones, going by experiences in other countries.
And the below-$200 slice of the smartphone market is at the heart of the action, accounting for some four-fifths of total Indian smartphone sales, IDC says.
- 'A time of transformation' -
California-based Mozilla, the non-profit organisation behind the open-source web browser Firefox, is the latest entry into India's cheap smartphone market.
Mozilla joined forces with Indian phonemaker Intex last month to launch a low-cost smartphone -- the Intex Cloud FX -- at 1,999 rupees.
Intex, which billed the smartphone as India's cheapest, said the first batch sold out in days. It aims to sell half-a-million handsets by the end of 2014.
Leading television channel NDTV's technology reviewer Jamshed Avari called the handset "a great start" for Firefox in India but warned of "agonising slowdowns" when operating it.
Intex's nearest smartphone rival price-wise is domestic handset-maker Spice, which sells its Firefox-powered Spice Fire One Mi-FX 1 for 2,299 rupees, or $37.
Using Firefox slashes 30 percent from prices of the closest Android-based competition, experts say. Other Indian handset-makers also have ultra-affordable Firefox-driven smartphones in the works.
The smartphone sales boom echoes India's initial staggering growth in mobile telephony in the last decade when the country was adding millions of new subscribers a month.
That frenetic growth has flattened -- the number of mobile users per 100 stands at 73.55 -- and now the focus is getting Internet access through smartphones.
"It's a time of transformation in the Indian mobile industry -- getting access to the Internet is where it's at," Vanitha Narayanan, IBM India managing director, told AFP.
Handset makers in India and other emerging markets have been leapfrogging fixed-line technology that was used in developed markets. They are employing mobile broadband to deliver Internet access to people who have no computers.
The replacement market now is propelling most mobile sales and the smartphone switchover is becoming much easier with the fall in prices and cheap monthly finance options.
All these developments could spell trouble for South Korean giant Samsung, which has targeted mainly high-end customers and leads the Indian smartphone market with a 29 percent share, according to IDC.
It needs to move into the high-volume, low-cost segment more decisively, analysts say.
Samsung is being shadowed aggressively by local heavyweight Micromax, which has become India's No. 2 smartphone brand in six years and boasts Hollywood actor Hugh Jackman as its brand ambassador.
Micromax, which has targeted the low-end consumer, has an 18 percent market share and is now moving upmarket as well as abroad with its phones.
"Samsung needs to continue to address the low end of the market aggressively and also needs a blockbuster product at the high end to regain momentum," said IDC's South Asia general manager Jaideep Mehta.
Apple deals at the top-price bracket but has been offering trade-in payments, instalment plans and older models to make its iconic phones more affordable -- a strategy it says has paid dividends, although its exact sales figures in India are not known.
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