Apple seems to buck declining PC shipment estimates

The PC market is in a serious decline both in the US and globally. According to Gartner, most manufacturers are struggling, except Apple which is on the rise.
Gartner's latest figures show that worldwide PC shipment estimates for Q4 2011 fell 1.4 percent. The biggest losers in the last three months of 2011 were HP and Acer, which declined 16.2 percent and 18.4 percent respectively. These numbers were even worse for the US market where shipment estimates declined 5.9 percent, the worst performance in the last decade.
The only bright spots, in an otherwise abysmal report, were recorded by Lenovo, Asus and Apple. While Acer and HP struggled in Q4, Lenovo and Asus were booming globally. Lenovo increased its shipments by 23 percent, and Asus grew an equally impressive 20.5 percent. Apple, however, was the star of the US market. The company's US shipments increased a significant 20.7 percent, while competitors like HP and Acer slipped 26.1 percent and 11.4 percent, respectively.
Analysts blame hard drive shortages for this quarterly decline. The supply of hard drives declined after devastating floods ravaged Thailand earlier in 2011. Though other manufacturers were struggling with supply constraints, Apple cruised along without missing a beat. Sales of the MacBook Air, which ships with flash storage and not a hard disk drive, probably gave Apple this extra bump.
[Via Engadget]
Share
Categories
The PC market is in a serious decline both in the US and globally. According to Gartner, most manufacturers are struggling, except...
Add a Comment
I really don't think the hard drive shortage had anything to do with Acer and HP's decline. HP in particular, in my opinion is too spread out. They have like 20+ models to choose from. If I wanted one, I wouldn't even know what to choose. They need to thin the herd. Also HP's business machines are just plain horrible in the aesthetics department, why does corporate = fugly! I'm using one right now at work, and I wouldn't buy one personally. Personally, I own a 2010 17" Macbook Pro, 2010 13" Macbook AIr and Asus Slate EP121.
January 13 2012 at 10:37 AM Report abuse Permalink +2 rate up rate down ReplyThe statements "Lenovo and Asus were booming globally" and "Apple cruised along without missing a beat" are inconsistent with analysts' claims that hard drive shortages are to blame for the overall decline. If PCs are available and their price hasn't been impacted, what's the difference? The vendor may be hurting, but the buyer is unaware and unaffected.
It's pretty clear that the real reasons for this shift, about which the analysts are apparently in denial, are lack of innovation on the part of mainstream PC makers and the purchasing preferences of non-US consumers.
Deals of the Day
more deals- Acoustic Research Digital Photo Frame with iPod Dock for $50 + free shipping
- Apple iPhone 4 8GB for Verizon, AT&T, or Sprint for $50 + pickup at Best Buy
- Unlocked iPhone 4S 16GB for GSM (AT&T, T-Mobile) for $619 + free shipping
- Apple iMac Core i7 Quad 3.4GHz 27" w/ 24GB RAM, 2TB HDD for $2,677 + $29 s&h
- Used Apple Magic Mouse for $36 + $4 s&h
- Skullcandy Riot Earbud Headphones for $10 + free shipping
2 Comments