It is has been another tough quarter for the world’s leading PC makers as they battle the twin problems caused by economic uncertainty and low consumer interest.
Indeed, according to reports from IT research firms Gartner and IDC, shipments of PCs worldwide stalled in the second quarter of 2012. Both firms reported that PC sales fell 0.1 percent compared with a year ago.
The results were slightly below IDC’s May projections of a 2.1 percent year-on-year growth. Gartner reported worldwide PC shipments totalled 87.5 million units for the quarter, led by Hewlett-Packard, Lenovo, Acer and Dell. In the United States, PC shipments totalled 15.9 million units in the second quarter of 2012, a 5.7 percent decline from the same period last year.
Market leader HP accounted for 14.9 percent of the market, but its global shipments declined 12.1 percent, according to Gartner, and continued to lead the US PC market, accounting for 25 percent of PC shipments in the second quarter of 2012.
“In the second quarter of 2012, the PC market suffered through its seventh consecutive quarter of flat to single-digit growth,” Mikako Kitagawa, principal analyst at Gartner, said in prepared remarks. “Uncertainties in the economy in various regions, as well as consumer’s low interest in PC purchases, were some of the key influencers of slow PC shipment growth. Despite the high expectations for the thin and light notebook segment, Ultrabooks, shipment volume was small and little impact on overall shipment growth.”
The US market fared worse than expected, shrinking by 10.6 percent compared to a forecast of 4.4 percent, according to IDC figures.
Among the top-tier leaders, only Lenovo managed to maintain positive momentum by growing its channel reach and being more aggressive against its well established competitors. However, at 6.1 percent year on year growth, IDC researchers noted even Lenovo’s growth decelerated abruptly from previous quarters’ double-digit growth rates, further reflecting slow market conditions in the US.
“The US market suffered a double-digit contraction in 2Q12 as market saturation and economic factors combine with anticipation of Windows 8 and other changes later in the year. In this context, consumers are delaying purchases, and vendors and retailers are slowing down their PC activities to clear existing inventories.
The situation is exacerbated by consumer notebook saturation, a slowing replacement cycle in the commercial sector, and the big macro-economic and political events affecting confidence and spending,” David Daoud, research director at IDC, said in a prepared statement. “We don’t expect PCs using Win 8 to boost growth significantly until Q4 – which leads to a conservative outlook for the third quarter.”
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Around a year ago we notified our IT help desk provider WorkSpace to submit an analysis for support of iPad within our user base. We expected at least 10% adoption within a year or two. A few weeks ago I was shocked that over 60% of our personnel moved to iPad within the last 8 months. The overall adoption to tablet is much stronger than we ever expected. The folks over at WorkSpace tell us no rise or fall in support so I guess the impact was minimal overall.