This appeared in today's WSJ:
June 18, 1996
PC Buyers Are Getting More For Even Less as Prices Fall
By SEWELL CHAN Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
PC price-cutting has entered a frenzied new phase.
With technological advances accelerating, the costs of some major computer components, including microprocessors and memory, have fallen sharply. And the cheaper parts -- along with continuing strong competition in the personal-computer industry -- have spurred some computer makers to cut prices for new PCs by 40% or more since last fall, compared with the 20% to 25% annual rate of decline the industry has experienced historically.
"What we've seen in the past eight to 10 months is the fastest dropping prices in the history of the industry," says David Prais, director of marketing for Gateway 2000 Inc., the leading mail-order PC seller.
The intense price cutting is a boon to consumers, who are getting faster, more powerful PCs for less money. But it has squeezed PC makers' profit margins and poses particular threats to weakened companies like Apple Computer Inc., Packard Bell Electronics Inc. and AST Research Inc. Sapped by weak sales, Digital Equipment Corp. fled the home-PC market in January to focus on selling to businesses.
A year ago, a Compaq Computer Corp. PC running on a 100 megahertz microprocessor cost $2,999. Today, a nearly identical model retails for $1,599, a 47% drop. An AST Advantage! PC with 16 megabytes of memory that runs on a 100 MHz microprocessor cost $2,799 last summer. A computer with those specifications -- and with a faster modem and CD-ROM drive and a bigger hard disk -- now retails for $1,699, a 39% drop.
High-end computer prices have also tumbled. Last June, customers could order a Gateway PC with a 1.6-gigabyte hard disk, a four-speed CD-ROM drive and a 133 MHz processor for $4,399. Today, they can purchase a Gateway with a 2.5-gigabyte hard disk, an eight-speed CD-ROM drive and a 166 MHz processor for $2,699, a 39% decline.
PC makers aren't trumpeting the lower prices on their cheaper computers, preferring instead to push more powerful $2,000 machines, where profit margins are higher. Most PC buyers today already own one or more computers and are demanding better performance, not cheaper models, says Dan Sheppard, AST's vice president for world-wide product marketing. In fact, the average price of a PC -- $2,071 as of April -- has remained relatively constant since 1992, according to Computer Intelligence InfoCorp.'s StoreBoard Channel Tracking monthly survey, which follows prices nationwide.
But the computing performance consumers are getting for their money is soaring, driven by dizzying price cuts for four major components: memory, processors, CD-ROM drives and hard disks.
Prices for dynamic random access memory, or DRAM, chips have led the way. They have dropped 60% since January, compared with the usual average decline of 25% each year. In addition to technological advances, DRAM vendors overestimated the growth of PC sales at the end of 1995 and were left with substantial excess inventory that they were forced to get rid of. The glut still hasn't been worked through completely, analysts say.
Prices for microprocessors, the brains of PCs, have also plunged. "The rate at which microprocessor performance is improving is increasing more rapidly today than ever before," says Nathan Brookwood, an analyst at Dataquest Inc. Intel Corp.'s 166 MHz Pentium processor was introduced in January at $740; the 200 MHz Pentium, rolled out last week, made its debut at $599. Like the PC makers, Intel is trying to maintain market share and profits by keeping prices low but selling high volumes.
Production of CD-ROM drives caught up to demand last November, spurring a price war among manufacturers eager to clear out inventory and resulting in the steepest price cuts for CD-ROM drives in recent memory. And though price cuts for hard-disk drives have remained stable at around 48% a year, manufacturers are "working on the lowest gross margins," cutting prices to maintain market share, says Phil Devin, an analyst at International Data Corp.
The lower prices have bolstered overall unit sales of PCs, contributing to a rise of between 14% and 15% in U.S. sales in the first quarter. But the falling prices are adding impetus to a division among computer makers into camps of winners and losers. Companies like Compaq and Hewlett-Packard Co., with their deep pockets and diverse product lines, are in a better position to ride out the cuts than some rivals. Companies like AST, Packard Bell and Apple, all of whom have been hurting lately, feel the price shock more.
Some computer makers have moved faster than others to increase sales by cutting prices. Gateway and Dell Computer Corp. lowered their prices to match falling manufacturing costs in the first quarter, while Compaq, AST and Hewlett-Packard have only recently pushed prices down to track plunging component costs, says John C. Dean, senior analyst at Salomon Brothers Inc. in San Francisco.
Price cutting is almost certain to worsen in the fall as the holiday shopping season approaches and Japanese manufacturers enter the PC market. "As the technology moves so quickly, you've got to sell through the shelf," says Sean Burke, director of product marketing for Compaq's Presario line of PCs. "You have got to be willing to change, sell, make your profit and move on."
Copyright © 1996 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
My curiosity is about how this is going to affect earnings in what is already a traditionally poor quarter for Gateway. Staying even would be a godsend, but is it possible even for them? Considering the practice Gateway has of not inventorying raw materials, will they find themselves in a squeeze when the current glut of chips dries up and prices rise? It's a field day for consumers right now, but I'd be interested in knowing what Gateway's strategy is going to be for protecting it's profitable 3rd and 4th quarters if they suddenly find themselves faced with rising costs of memory.
Or is it possible that Gateway can ride out the thin profit margins, outlast a few of the competitors who are on shaky ground, and emerge as strong competition for the Japanese who will be entering the market later this year? I think it's a remarkable feather in Gateway's cap that they were able to introduce the Destination system, and there are now a whole slew of "me too's" on the horizon. It's obvious that establishing a strong foothold in high-end systems will be one way of holding on to some better profit margins. |