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Worldwide PC shipments in 2009 Q4 posted strongest growth rate in seven years: Gartner
Worldwide PC shipments surpassed 90 million units in the fourth quarter of
2009, a 22.1% increase from the fourth quarter of 2008, according to preliminary
results by Gartner, Inc. It was the strongest quarter over quarter growth rate
the worldwide PC market has experienced in the last seven years.
These preliminary results indicate the recovery of the PC market on a
global level, said Mikako Kitagawa, Principal Analyst at Gartner. The
US and Asia/Pacific had already shown positive indicators last quarter, however
the fourth quarter 2009 results were more concrete evidence of the recovery.
The Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) region entered the economic downturn
later than the US and Asia/Pacific, so it has been slower to recover. The EMEA
region returned to positive shipment growth for the first time in three quarters,
and Latin America and Japan also recorded shipment increases.
Shipment growth was largely driven by low-priced consumer mobile PCs,
both in regular notebooks and mini-notebooks. As economic weakness continued,
buyers became extremely price sensitive. Low-priced PCs were good enough for
many average consumers, Kitagawa said. Windows 7 was launched during
the fourth quarter of 2009. Though the new operating system launch did not create
additional PC demand, the launch was a good market tool during holiday sales.
HP maintained the top position in worldwide PC shipments in the fourth quarter
of 2009, as it grew slightly higher than the industry average. Gartner analysts
said HP did very well in the US market, and it regained the No. 1 position in
the US and EMEA.
Acer established itself as a leader of the sub-$500 consumer mobile PC segment
in key regions. Acers improved branding strategies also helped it to work
better with channel partners. Dell grew below the worldwide average in the fourth
quarter. The company did not fully benefit from strong holiday sales. Dell was
not as aggressive on pricing as its competitors in order to protect profits.
In the US, PC shipments totaled 19.8 million units in the fourth quarter of
2009, a 26.5% increase compared to the fourth quarter of 2008. Similar to worldwide
trends, this was the highest quarter over quarter growth rate in the US in the
last seven years.
Aggressive promotion by PC vendors and channels stimulated consumer PC
demand, Kitagawa said. However, some vendors made damaging price
cuts to increase market share.
HP surpassed Dell as the No. 1 vendor in the US based on PC shipments in the
fourth quarter of 2009. HP became more competitive on pricing, and teamed up
successfully with large retailers. Dell struggled to retain its share in the
consumer market. Dell could not win the severe price battle in the retail space,
and its ongoing weakness in the large enterprise market also affected its growth
rate.
In the fourth quarter of 2009, PC shipments in EMEA totaled 29.7 million units,
a 3.6% increase from the fourth quarter of 2008. The professional market continued
to be weak, but there are indications of optimism as organizations were able
to use remaining budgets to purchase PCs at the end of 2009. The mobile consumer
market kept the Western Europe market going through the increased volume of
mini-notebooks, with total mini-notebook shipments representing over 20% of
the total EMEA mobile PC market.
In Asia/Pacific, PC shipments surpassed 27.1 million units, a 44.4% increase
from the fourth quarter of 2008. China was key to the regions performance,
as the country accounted for more than 61% of all PCs shipped in the region.
Overall in the region, enterprise demand for PCs continued
to be discretionary, but there was some spending to finish budgets. Companies
still remain cautious in their spending rather than embark on large PC deployment
projects.
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