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PC Leaders Continue Growth And Share Gains As Market Remains Slow: IDC

btarunr

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Worldwide PC shipments totaled 80.8 million units in the fourth quarter of 2014 (4Q14), a year-on-year decline of -2.4%, according to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly PC Tracker. Total shipments were slightly above expectations of -4.8% growth, but the market still contracted both year on year and in comparison to the third quarter. Although the holiday quarter saw shipment volume inch above 80 million for the first time in 2014, the final quarter nonetheless marked the end of yet another difficult year - the third consecutive year with overall volumes declining. On an annual basis, 2014 shipments totaled 308.6 million units, down -2.1% from the prior year.

Although the U.S. and Europe remained stronger than other markets, growth in these mature regions slowed from earlier in the year. Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan)(APeJ) continued to strengthen, seeing only a very slight increase in volume as a number of public projects and improving consumer demand helped stabilize the market. Similarly, commercial demand, which boosted growth earlier in the year, has slowed while consumer demand is gradually coming back. Nevertheless, the market progress has been fueled by low-priced systems, including growth of Chromebooks and promotion of Windows 8 + Bing. Constraints on Bing promotions, such as limits on larger-sized devices, could remove a key market driver while some fourth quarter production was attributed to getting ahead of holiday-related production constraints in Asia in the first quarter, effectively shifting volume from early 2015 into the end of 2014.



"The strength from market leaders, as well as improvement in Asia/Pacific and the consumer market more generally, are positive signs for the PC market," said Loren Loverde, IDC Vice President, Worldwide PC Tracker. "Growth of Chrome, Bing, all-in-ones, ultraslim, convertibles, and touch systems similarly make PCs more compelling and competitive. Nevertheless, some of the gains are relatively small, and weakening drivers like Bing promotions and end of XP support transitions, cast a shadow of doubt on the strength of the market going into 2015."

"The U.S. PC market continued to grow in the fourth quarter, outperforming the global market for the tenth consecutive quarter. The past year was supported by Windows XP to 7 migrations in the commercial segment while consumer volume continued to decline," said Rajani Singh, Senior Research Analyst, Personal Computing. "Moving forward, the U.S. PC market should see flat to slightly positive growth. The U.S. consumer PC market will finally move to positive growth in 2015, strengthened by the slowdown in the tablet market, vendor and OEM efforts to rejuvenate the PC market, the launch of Window 10, and replacement of older PCs."

Regional Highlights
United States - Market leader HP had a remarkable quarter with year on year growth jumping to more than 26%. Other key vendors also had strong performances. As a result, the U.S. PC market concentration has increased to 83% of shipments coming from the top 5 vendors. Portable PC growth remains strong with double-digit growth from a year ago, while desktop shipments declined by more than -10%.

Europe, Middle East, and Africa (EMEA) - PC shipments in EMEA posted a slight increase in the fourth quarter, fuelled mainly by strong consumer demand during the holiday season. Vendors continued to stock up ahead of Christmas and January promotional sales, and before the February change to Bing promotions, which will exclude 15 inch notebooks. This translated into stronger than expected shipments of portable PCs, while desktop PC sell-in remained softer, particularly in the commercial space. Political and economic factors, especially unfavourable exchange rates, also negatively impacted numerous countries across the region.

Japan - The market continued to slump following a surge of XP replacements a year ago. Vendors took the time to clear excess inventory in the channel, leading to a lean quarter. Volume fell below 3 million units in the quarter, a drop of -35% year on year and its lowest level since the fourth quarter of 2006.

Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan) - APeJ continued to stabilize with growth rising to positive territory following several years of significant declines. HP had a strong recovery from recent quarters, while Dell continued to gain share. Slowing growth in tablets and smartphones as well as promotions of lower-priced Windows 8 + Bing systems helped relieve some pressure on the PC market.

Vendor Highlights
Lenovo continued to push hard in EMEA, expanding channels and capturing consumer holiday demand. The company also outpaced the market in the U.S. - though by a smaller margin - and was closer to market growth in other regions. Shipments reached a record 16 million units in 4Q14 with year-on-year growth of 4.9%, and annual shipments up over 10% from last year.

HP also saw a tremendous quarter with 15.9 million units and year on year growth surpassing 15%. A particularly strong quarter in the U.S. was a key driver, along with some volume for public projects in Asia/Pacific and Africa.

Dell shipped over 10.8 million units growing 8.5% on the year, much of it based on a strong performance in notebooks in the U.S. and APeJ. Rising growth in APeJ also helped offset slowing growth in the U.S. and Europe.

Acer grew over 3%, in part due to low volume a year ago but also from the success of its Chromebooks and entry-level notebooks. Acer's recovery in the U.S. and Europe slowed, in part due to higher year ago numbers.

Apple kept the number 5 position on a worldwide basis, maintaining its lead over ASUS. The company's steady growth, along with recent price cuts and improved demand in mature markets, has helped it to consistently outgrow the market.

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nice to hear after a while where portable devices slap the market
 

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I suspect Windows 10 is going to turn that frown upside down. So many people are putting off upgrading because Windows 8.1 is such a turn off. I suspect a few years after Windows 10 debuts, businesses will also move to adopt 10 (assuming Microsoft catrastrophically fails again with Windows 11 or whatever it is called) causing a second surge of new computer sales.
 
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I suspect Windows 10 is going to turn that frown upside down. So many people are putting off upgrading because Windows 8.1 is such a turn off. I suspect a few years after Windows 10 debuts, businesses will also move to adopt 10 (assuming Microsoft catrastrophically fails again with Windows 11 or whatever it is called) causing a second surge of new computer sales.

I'd be a bit hesitant to attribute significant stagnation in the market to Windows 8 / 8.1 alone. Especially so since Windows 7 is still an option on some systems.

Also, there has been a fair bit of concern over where Microsoft will be going with respect to Windows 10 and a new licensing scheme that involves subscriptions. So in other words users may be required to pay monthly or annually just to use Windows 10 rather then the buy once / activate licenses scheme we are used to. There are some other points of concern as well since Windows 10 is being dubbed "the last Major Windows update".

In other words Microsoft can still find a way to screw things up with Windows 10 as well as future versions of Windows so as to make them virtually unpalatable (to many).
 

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There are some other points of concern as well since Windows 10 is being dubbed "the last Major Windows update".

Is it the last major update or last major release? So long as MS continues to update Win 10 then it really doesn't matter to me even if they have to charge a small fee to cover their expenses. I can't picture the hundreds of millions of desktops around the world being dumped. Where I work they are providing iPads to anyone that needs one but that doesn't replace their PC.
 

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If it is subscription based, it will fail just like Windows 8 and 8.1. In that event, Microsoft will either drop subscriptions a few months later or most people will continue to put off updating until Windows 11 (or whatever it is called). Microsoft will figure it out eventually and most consumers/businesses are willing to wait especially seeing how hardware demands have stagnated in most scenarios (internet and Office).

I suspect the subscriptions won't be to Windows itself but to extras like enabling Cortana.
 
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If it is subscription based, it will fail just like Windows 8 and 8.1. In that event, Microsoft will either drop subscriptions a few months later or most people will continue to put off updating until Windows 11 (or whatever it is called). Microsoft will figure it out eventually and most consumers/businesses are willing to wait especially seeing how hardware demands have stagnated in most scenarios (internet and Office).

I suspect the subscriptions won't be to Windows itself but to extras like enabling Cortana.

Subsciption for stuff like Cortana would suck so hard.
Plus, I dont think it would be the case.
If you have Windows Phone 8.1 now, you have Cortana.
Same should be for Windows 10 too.
 

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Windows Phone needs a personal assistant included because the competition does as well (Apple Siri and Google Now). Windows has no such competition (Linux/OS X) so it's something that is an extra people would be willing to pay for without getting too mad about it.

I have no idea though--just threw that out as a possibility. Microsoft won't make the operating system subscription based though because virtually no one would buy it. Microsoft would basically be screaming "Apple/Linux take my money!" Then again...it wouldn't be the first nor the last stupid thing Microsoft has done (e.g. making Windows RT a walled garden).
 
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