Samsung has provided confirmation that iPhone X sales are way below Apple's estimates for the much-hyped, tenth anniversary special. The miscalculation could end up benefitting Android owners.

News that public demand for the £999 phone was falling short of expectations came over the Christmas holidays, with Bloomberg reporting that what was supposed to be an initial order of 50 million units had been reduced to 30 million.

But Apple may have downgraded demand estimates even further. Nikkei now confirms that Samsung, Apple's OLED panel supplier, is cutting production in response to Apple's lower expectations.

"Samsung Display now plans to manufacture organic light-emitting diode panels for 20 million or fewer iPhones at the South Chungcheong site in the January-March quarter. The initial goal was to supply panels for 45 million to 50 million iPhones," the FT owner's Asian biz news service reports.

The high price of the X reflects the high cost of its components. Teardown specialist IHS Markit pegs the BOM [bill of materials] as $370, considerably higher than the $288.08 estimate it gives for the iPhone 8 Plus.

Both numbers exclude basic manufacturing cost, which IHS pegs at $7.36.

The silicon in each is the same, but the X uses an $110 (estimate) display panel.

Landfill iPhone? Not yet

So how could Android buyers benefit? Last week, Nikkei reported that Apple's bodged estimates had created a "glut" of OLED panels. Samsung was now shopping these around the Android ODM community, hoping they would become buyers for the panels Apple doesn't need.

So will Apple's pain turn into consumers' gain, with punters being able to buy X-grade displays in much cheaper phones? Maybe.

Nikkei notes that the not-X-destined OLED screens are still big ticket items that most models do not need. But given the market dynamics, it's not difficult to imagine vendors rushing out an X-alike 'Droid to capitalise on the supply. ®