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To: puborectalis who wrote (93128)11/29/1999 3:04:00 PM
From: Tony Viola  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Steven, re "Intel Says Asia Ex-Japan Sales in ? Near Pre-Crisis $7.4 Bln"

Between that article and the one below, there is an incredible amount of good news on the revenue front, from the Far East this year, for Intel. From your article, Asia, not including Japan, $7.4 billion this year vs. 5.3 billion last.
Net 2.1 billion for the year. Now Japan (from a delta PC sales point of view, Intel has vast majority of microprocessor representation in PCs, worldwide). Makes me want to mimic Mary and say 'why doesn't Intel make more of news like this huge improvement in the Far East':

Japan's PC Sales in October Increase 81 Pct. Year-on-Year
November 29, 1999 (TOKYO) -- Sales of personal computers in Japan in October surged 81
percent over the previous year and 4.4 percent over the previous month.

Sales of PCs usually drop around this time of year because it is an in-between period of the summer
sales drive and the year-end sales campaign when new models are put on sale. However, the PC
market this October was boosted by a series of low-priced models marketed by major makers.

According to figures compiled by GfK Japan Ltd., sales of personal computers at about 2,000
household electrical appliance stores increased by 81 percent compared with the previous year. GfK
Japan is an information service company which handles POS data for 55 discount retailers.

The accumulated sales of units in 1999 from January to October soared by 64.2 percent compared
with the same period in 1998. And it is about 1.2 times of the total sales of units in 1998, GfK said.

Sales in October 1998 suffered a 10.8 percent loss compared with the previous month. The 81
percent increase this October was the second highest next to the 85.8 percent rise recorded in July,
GfK said.

Brisk sales of desktop and tower PCs, which are priced at lower than 100,000 yen, boosted the
overall performance of PCs, GfK said. (104.47 yen = US$1)

After IBM Japan Ltd. put on sale in September a model priced at less than 100,000 yen, NEC Corp.
and Fujitsu Ltd. followed suit, and that is believed to have expanded the market.