Stan Beer
Tuesday, 03 March 2009 07:52
Opinion and Analysis
Page 2 of 2
Worldwide mobile PC shipments are
expected to reach 155.6 million units, a 9% increase from 2008.
Desk-based PC shipments are forecast to total 101.4 million units, a
31.9% decline from 2008. Mobile PC growth will be substantially boosted
by continued growth in mini-notebook shipments; excluding
mini-notebooks, other mobile PC shipments will grow just 2.7% in 2009.
Worldwide mini-notebook shipments are forecast to total 21 million
units in 2009, up from 2008 shipments of 11.7 million units.
Mini-notebooks will cushion the overall PC market slowdown, but they
remain too few to prevent the market’s steep decline. Mini-notebooks
are forecast to represent just 8% of PC shipments in 2009.
"The
mini-notebook market is dividing as vendors offer more systems with 9”
to 10” screens in addition to those to with 7” to 8” screens,” said
Angela McIntyre, research director at Gartner.
“For the most part, users are moving toward systems with larger screens
and greater capabilities; systems with 8.9” screens were the standard
in the second half of 2008. Naturally, systems with larger screens and
greater capabilities cost more but prices in general continue to fall.
In late 2008, the average price in the U.S. for a mini-notebook with an
8.9” screen, Microsoft Windows XP and a 160 GB hard drive was around
$450.
"We expect the average price of the same machine to drop to $399 by the
end of this year. Mature markets continue to be the primary consumers
of mini-notebooks, but as prices continue to fall, they are likely to
attract increasing numbers of emerging market buyers.”
Gartner
analysts said overall, original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and the
channels are able to react much faster to changing market conditions
than in previous years. Razor thin margins and the lessons learned in
2001 have schooled PC vendors and channels in the necessity to invest
in their supply chains. These investments have given them much better
visibility of demand, even though products are largely being built in
Asia by third parties and therefore have long lead times.
“Normal
seasonality typically means that the third quarter sell in is stronger
than sell out, due to inventory build effects, but clearly in the
fourth quarter of 2008 vendors saw signals that demand was weakening
and sent signals up the supply chain to stop building,” said Charles
Smulders, managing vice president at Gartner.
“At the same time, the channel cut back inventory due to a combination
of economic uncertainty and the credit squeeze. Unlike 2001, vendors
were able to react relatively quickly to the signals and push the
inventory risk on to the component suppliers. We expect the pattern of
stronger sell out demand than sell in to continue through the first
half of 2009, with the channel choosing to hold inventory at
historically low levels.”
So there you have it, it's going to be a bad year for the industry but if you happen to be lucky enough to be a cashed up consumer, there are likely to be some PC bargains to be had.