J.P. Morgan Positive on PC Unit Growth By TSC Staff 08/25/2003 09:12 AM EDT
thestreet.com
On the heels of bullish updates from Dell (DELL:Nasdaq - commentary - research) and Intel (INTC:Nasdaq - commentary - research), J.P. Morgan analysts Monday raised their estimate for personal-computer unit growth in 2003.
The brokerage now expects PC unit volume to rise 8% or 9% in 2003, up from its old forecast for growth of 7%.
"While we have yet to see any meaningful signs of a corporate upgrade cycle, we believe the continued strength of notebooks shipments and improvements in the small and medium-sized business segments warrant an increasingly optimistic outlook," J.P. Morgan wrote.
On Friday, Intel raised its third-quarter revenue guidance, saying its microprocessor division was seeing higher demand. That followed better-than-expected earnings from Dell a week earlier and comments from both it and Hewlett-Packard (HPQ:NYSE - commentary - research) that notebook unit volume has been very solid.
"Early indications are that the back-to-school season could drive sequential unit growth of more than 8% in the third quarter," J.P. Morgan wrote. "For the fourth quarter we are expecting seasonal strength, with units growing 17% sequentially."
While signs of a revival in PC sales is welcome news to tech investors, the brokerage noted the unit gains might not go hand-in-hand with revenue gains.
"Unfortunately, these improving unit volumes are at least partially driven by increasingly aggressive pricing from the largest PC manufacturers," it wrote. "As a result, we are forecasting flat revenue for 2003, with modest growth of 3% for 2004." |