SK Telecom, Korea’s top mobile operator, will start selling the iPhone next month in a break from Apple’s practice of selling the smartphones via a single distributor in each major market, industry source said Thursday.
“Negotiations between SK Telecom and Apple are in the final stage,” said the source who is familiar with the matter. “As the negotiations are going smoothly, it is virtually decided that SK Telecom will launch the iPhone.”
KT, SK Telecom’s smaller rival and currently the sole distributor of iPhones in Korea, has sold about two million units since the gadget’s debut in November 2009.
SK Telecom, which controls about half of the nation’s wireless market, has for years sought to dominate the rapidly-growing smartphone market by selling Samsung Electronics’ Galaxy S and other devices powered by the Android platform.
Technology research firm Gartner said global smartphone sales soared 72.1 percent in 2010 over the previous year and accounted for 19 percent of total mobile sales last year.
Apple sold 46.6 million units in 2010 and saw its market share increase from 2.1 percent to 2.9 percent, it said.