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Technology Stocks : Dell Technologies Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TTOSBT who wrote (132617)6/14/1999 8:02:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 176387
 
Dell to unveil new consumer PCs starting at $899
By Eric Auchard
NEW YORK, June 14 (Reuters) - Dell Computer Corp. <DELL.O>
said it plans on Tuesday to unveil new lower-priced personal
computers starting at $899, in a bid to step up its attack on
the consumer PC market while overcoming its resistance to
selling PCs at bargain-basement prices.
The Round Rock, Texas company, the top direct seller of
PCs, said it would offer its new Dimension L series PCs running
low-cost Intel Corp. <INTC.O> Celeron chips at prices starting
at $899, or $27 per month under a four-year financing plan.
Dell considers the $899 machines competitive with PCs from
other name-brand makers priced below $599 that typically offer
only PC boxes but sacrifice key components like color monitors,
multi-year warranties, software and services.
The new PCs mark the latest careful steps by Dell into the
sub-$1,000 desktop market -- the price level many consumers now
expect to pay for a Celeron-based home PC. Most Dell PCs run
high-powered Pentium chips and are priced considerably higher.
"While most of our customers continue to buy
performance-class PCs with Pentium III processors, others want
a second, low-cost PC with the service and support Dell is
known for," Paul Bell, senior vice president of Dell's home and
small business group, said in a statement obtained Sunday.
Until this spring, Dell resisted the industry's move to
price PCs below $1,000, focusing instead on sales of
higher-power machines for customers willing to pay more. Rivals
Compaq Computer Corp. <CPQ.N> and International Business
Machines Corp. <IBM.N> offer PCs ranging as low as $499 to
$699.
"This shows that Dell is not willing to get relegated to
the high-end of the market and get squeezed out of the mass
market," said Van Baker, a PC analyst with market researcher
Dataquest, who had been briefed on Dell's plans.
Dell's push into low-cost PCs marks a bid by the computer
maker to step up growth in consumer and small business markets,
each of which represent about 15 percent of total company
revenues. Corporate PC sales constituted the other two-thirds
of Dell's $18 billion in annual revenues last year.
As a result of its focus on selling higher performance
machines to repeat customers, the average selling price of a
Dell PC remains around $2,300, significantly above its rivals.
But in order to tap this high-volume PC market, Dell is now
showing itself willing to join the lower-price fray.
Dell ranked No. 4 in the U.S. consumer market behind
Compaq, Gateway Inc. <GTW.N> and Hewlett-Packard Co. <HWP.N> in
the first two months of 1999, according to Trendata, a report
on household PC buying by Ziff-Davis market researchers. Dell
is the No. 1 seller of PCs to U.S. small businesses and No. 2
in overall PC sales worldwide, surveys show.
Dataquest's Baker said Dell has a ready audience among its
existing customers, who may be in the market for a second PC,
but for which Dell had little to offer them -- until now.
"The loyal Dell following has not had a low-cost PC to buy
from Dell," he noted of the company's core customer base.
For $899, a Dimension L400 comes with a 400 megahertz, or
million cycle per second, Celeron chip, and moderate amounts of
computer memory and hard disk space. It also includes a compact
disk player, speakers, a Microsoft Windows 98 operating system
and the MS Works Suite 99 software for word processing,
graphics and other key functions.
The PC also has an expandable chassis that provides access
to internal components for future upgrades -- in contrast to
most sub-$1,000 PCs that are built for one-time use only.
Dell said it will begin taking orders on Tuesday for its
new Dimension L series, which include 400 megahertz, 433
megahertz and 466 megahertz Intel Celeron processors.
The company expects to ship the new L series by late July,
in line with other PC makers who have begun announcing similar
families of PC...