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To: rupert1 who wrote (69955)10/25/1999 5:58:00 PM
From: rudedog  Respond to of 97611
 
victor -
neither, I took it from another poster who was obviously misinformed. I stand corrected, DELL is no longer #1 in the UK. I'm still sorting through the data and will have some comments later.



To: rupert1 who wrote (69955)10/25/1999 8:34:00 PM
From: hlpinout  Respond to of 97611
 
Hiya Victor,
You may have already seen this by now.
--
October 25, 1999

European PC Sales Surge 19.3%
On Strong Small-Firm Demand

By NEAL E. BOUDETTE
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

European personal computer sales surged 19.3% in the third quarter as
strong demand from small and medium-size businesses offset the damping
effect of year 2000 on corporate purchasing, according to London-based
market researcher Context.

The rise in third quarter unit sales to 6.46 million PCs brightens the outlook
for the year's final quarter and allays fears that sales would plunge as work
on the millennium bug will reach a peak, said Jeremy Davies, senior partner
at Context.

"Our prediction is that the fourth quarter is going to be OK. It may not be
brilliant, but it is definitely not going to be a disaster," Mr. Davies said.

A big winner in the third quarter was Fujitsu Siemens Computers BV.
Formed by the merger of the PC units of Siemens AG and Fujitsu Ltd., the
company sold 715,000 PCs in the third quarter, up 47% year-to-year. Its
market share climbed to 14%. In the second quarter, before the merger,
the two companies had a combined 11.7% of the European market.

Compaq Computer Corp. topped Europe with 18.2% market share,
although its unit sales only kept pace with the market, rising 19.3% to 1.18
million PCs. In third place, Dell Computer Corp. saw unit sales climb 50%
to 672,000, for market share of 10.4%.
International Business Machines
Corp. was fourth with an 8% share of the market as unit sales increased
16% to 514,000. Hewlett-Packard Co. sales grew 33.5% to 459,000
PCs, for a market share of 7.1%.

PC sales in Germany, Britain, the Netherlands, France and Spain all rose
by between 19% and 23%. In Sweden, where government and employer
subsidy programs sparked a PC buying binge last year, sales fell 23.5%.

Y2K did take a toll on third quarter purchases by large corporations, but
smaller companies more than made up for it.

"The big fear was that there would be a meltdown, but small and
medium-size enterprises have gone on an incredible buying spree and kept
the market up," Mr. Davies said.

Fourth-quarter growth could come in at 18%-19% if manufacturers can
keep retail shelves stocked and meet the right price points, he added.

Whether they can is a question because the recent earthquake in Taiwan
has left some key components in short supply, and pushed up the prices.
Dell recently warned higher memory prices due to the earthquake would
hurt third-quarter profit.

"You can't get four [mega]-byte hard drives right now," said Winifried
Hoffman, Fujitsu Siemens Chief Executive.

Fujitsu Siemens should have little trouble producing high-end PCs because
its parent companies produce memory chips and components, Mr.
Hoffman said. However, for very low-cost machines, "December will be
tight."

Likewise, Compaq, IBM and Hewlett-Packard may not be as pinched
because they carry more inventory than Dell, Mr. Davies said. "What a
wonderful time to have computers in the channel," he said.

Write to Neal Boudette at neal.boudette@wsj.com