Reuters reports that demand for PCs is starting to increase again but argues that the PC manufacturers have defended their market share (and tried to seize market share) with aggressive pricing strategies. According to Reuters:
A gradual bounce back in consumer demand is helping keep the struggling personal computer market afloat, but plunging prices and a shift toward cheaper machines will keep up the pressure on profits.
Globally, consumers are coming back to PCs, but they are doing so at prices as much as one-fifth lower than even a year ago, analysts say.
Hewlett-Packard Co, Dell Inc and rivals Acer and Lenovo have slugged it out to keep sales up and safeguard or take market share: a battle that of late has been waged by aggressive pricing, analysts say.
Pacific Crest Securities analyst Brent Bracelin noted PC prices have fallen for years, but the decline accelerated with the introduction of no-frills netbooks. He said PC makers have plenty of experience managing costs to maintain margins.
"There's always going to be pressure," he said. "The question is how well do you manage the supply chain and try to reduce costs at the same pace as the price decline or faster."
The global PC market is still limping along, with second-quarter shipments falling 5 percent from a year ago, according to Gartner. But that result was better than expected, and Gartner said the continued growth of low-cost laptops was a driving factor.
A bounce back in the PC sector is good for Taiwan. The bounce back, if real, will certainly seep through the supply chain and increase demand from PC component suppliers. This in the long run will have a positive impact on the Taiwanese economy and hopefully ensure people here will be able to find more jobs and opportunities. The other interesting side of this would be to understand who has lost and gained. There was speculation earlier in the year that ACER would climb above Dell to no. 2. Time will tell I suppose but my guess would be that in these times that demand frugality and attention to cost, the Asian suppliers might be better off.
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