PC Market Growth Surges According to IDC
July 19, 2005
The PC market again proved its resilience as worldwide shipments jumped to 16.6%
growth in the second quarter, according to IDC's Worldwide Quarterly PC Tracker.
Low-cost systems and portable adoption continue to be key market drivers, stimulating
consumer adoption as well as commercial replacements. EMEA was once again a source
of tremendous growth while other regions are also performing well. Worldwide growth
was up more than 4% from May forecasts of 12.3%, while growth of 11.7% in the
United States was in line with forecasts of 11.6%.
"This kind of growth in the PC market is just amazing," said Loren
Loverde, director of IDC's Worldwide Quarterly PC Tracker. "At some point
we expect the flood of consumer and portable demand to let up, but so far falling
prices and demand across regions and market segments continues to support growth.
Such consistent growth raises the prospect that the recent replacement wave
is being supplanted by growing adoption that could sustain higher growth into
the future."
“While desktop sales remain stimulated by record low prices, notebook
adoption in the United States continues to accelerate," said David Daoud,
research manager of Client Computing at IDC. "Segments that have shown
sensitivity to pricing have been reacting positively to incentive pricing while
fully endorsing mobile computing. This trend of notebook adoption in the U.S.
market is expected to remain strong well into the forecast.”
Regional Outlook
- United States – As expected, year-on-year growth in the United States
recovered from a first quarter that was constrained by slow public sector
spending and a difficult comparison to a year ago. Public sector and consumer
demand improved in the second quarter, while the business segment remained
solid.
- EMEA – Growing competition in the consumer notebook market is increasing
attention on low cost systems and fueling demand. Replacement and consumer
activity, as well as investment related to European Union expansion and integration,
helped boost overall EMEA growth above 20% after several quarters of growth
in the high teens.
- Japan – Consumer demand continues to recover gradually. Constrained
by slow economic growth, competition from other consumer electronics, and
high PC penetration, particularly of portables, growth is now rising in response
to low prices and an aging installed base.
- Asia/Pacific – Major markets continue to perform well with a notable
rise in regional growth. Despite concerns of rising interest rates, oil prices,
and efforts to manage the Chinese economy, business investment and consumer
interest in low-cost PCs is accelerating the market.
Vendor Highlights
- Dell – Dell had a solid second quarter, expanding its lead with worldwide
growth of nearly 24%. Following a relatively slow first quarter performance,
the company recaptured momentum with near 50% growth in Asia/Pacific, Latin
America, and worldwide portable shipments.
- HP – International shipment growth of nearly 23% helped HP to maintain
its share of the market with worldwide growth of 16.3%. HP saw strong demand
in Europe, where it maintains the market lead, and in Asia/Pacific.
- Lenovo – Lenovo appears to be working through its merger issues fairly
well. Worldwide growth of 7.7% for the combined companies was up from a merged
6.8% in the first quarter, and only 2.1% for IBM in Q1 2005. Although year-on-year
growth in the United States was down almost 12%, U.S. shipments increased
over 9% sequentially. Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan), which now represents
over 50% of the company's shipments, grew by over 18% year on year.
- Acer – Acer continues to be very successful throughout EMEA, driving
growth of over 65% with low-cost portables and desktops through an extensive
distribution channel. The company also saw strong growth in Asia/Pacific and
is developing operations in the Americas including a re-entry to retail in
the United States.
- Fujitsu/Fujitsu Seimens – Fujitsu Seimens continues to develop its
European focus. While shipments in Japan have been flat over the past year,
European shipments have grown by over 20% and now account for over 60% of
the company's PC business.
- Gateway – A year after its acquisition of eMachines and following
distribution agreements with high profile channels, Gateway saw shipments
rise by over 26% year on year. The growth is welcome evidence that the eMachines
acquisition is bearing fruit and that the company will be ready for consumer,
education, and small business sales in the second half of the year. Still,
the growth comes after a fairly weak first quarter, and the company will need
several quarters of solid growth to regain momentum.
- Apple – Apple had another very strong quarter with growth of more
than 37%. Growth in retail, Europe, and Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan) all
grew by more than twice the worldwide rate. The Mac mini as well as the visibility
and appeal of Apple's music business, including the iPod line, has clearly
benefited the company's PC business and the company appears well positioned
for education and consumer sales going into the second half of the year.