The worldwide PC market grew at a healthy 15.3 per cent in the second quarter but the weak economy means tough times and possibly a wave of consolidation may lie ahead for PC makers, according to surveys released Wednesday.
The weak economy has already started taking its toll on the U.S., where belt-tightening among businesses and consumers has led to PC shipment growth in the low single digits, according to figures from IDC. Growth in Asia was roughly 15 per cent, but strong laptop sales helped EMEA report strong double-digit growth, IDC said.
Gartner, which also released its figures Wednesday, said the weak economy has forced PC makers to slash prices in order to stay competitive. That’s good news for end users but could mean the end for smaller PC makers if the trend continues.
“The industry could ultimately see a significant wave of consolidation if stronger vendors continue to press their pricing advantage.” Gartner said.
The leading PC makers can reduce their costs by working with suppliers to get better deals, but smaller PC vendors don’t have that type of leverage, said David Daoud, an IDC research manager.
U.S. PC shipments grew just 3.6 per cent in the quarter to 17 million units, down from IDC’s original prediction of 3.8 per cent, Daoud said. People are spending more on essentials like gas and food and have little money for discretionary items like PCs and consumer electronics gear, he said.
Shipments in EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Africa) grew 23.5 per cent, while shipments in Asia-Pacific climbed 18.1 per cent, according to Gartner. Notebook sales were particularly strong, growing 40 per cent worldwide, it said.
According to Gartner’s survey, Apple overtook Acer in the U.S. to take third place behind Dell and HP, shipping 1.4 million units compared to Acer’s 1.33 million. IDC had Acer and Apple neck and neck.
Worldwide, HP retained its spot as top PC vendor, shipping 13.32 million units for an 18.9 per cent share of the market, up 16.8 per cent year-over-year. Dell, in second place, shipped 11.56 million units for a 16.4 per cent market share and a 21.4 per cent year-over-year increase. Acer witnessed a sharp 63.5 per cent year-over-year rise, putting it in third place with 6.97 million units shipped. Lenovo and Toshiba came fourth and fifth, respectively.