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To: kemble s. matter who wrote (158393)7/8/2000 12:01:45 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 176388
 
PC makers tighten grip on prices

By Joe Wilcox
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
July 7, 2000, 1:15 p.m. PT
Consumers looking for bargain PCs are finding there are none.

A year after the ISP rebate craze brought down the cost of new PCs to next to nothing, prices have risen, stabilized and then nudged upward again.

According to the Boswell Report, which tracks retail computer sales, average PC prices rose from $1,058 during the first three weeks of June last year to $1,087 during the same period this year. That's about a 3 percent increase.

Component shortages are partly to blame, but PC manufacturers--besieged by increasingly shrinking margins--also are simply unwilling to cut prices.

With PC demand high and component costs increasing, Compaq Computer, Dell Computer and other manufacturers have no reason to slash prices.

"PC vendors have been very reluctant to put lower-end products on the market, focusing instead on the midtier and higher end, which is where you make money," ARS analyst Matt Sargent said.

July 2000 was a stark contrast to last summer, when a flurry of promotions meant some consumers could walk out of Best Buy with an Emachines PC for as little as a buck.

"PCs went through kind of a pricing bloodbath around this time last year," PC Data analyst Steve Koenig said. "Manufacturers and retailers have the attitude they don't want to go there again because there's just no money in it.

"PC prices are beginning to stabilize because pricing is not a differentiator anymore and because they're beginning to hit a sweet spot in the market," Koenig added.

Compared with last year's blowout sales, this year's hold-the-line pricing is striking. PC manufacturers normally reduce prices during the typically slow summer selling season and clear out inventory for back-to-school models.

PC prices "are fairly stable, but that is a concern particularly at this time of year," Sargent said. "June, July and August tend to be slow times in the PC market, and people tend to look for bargains. If those bargains aren't there, there tends to be a slowing of the PC market, which we're seeing right now."

May was the slowest sales month since July 1998, according to PC Data.

Although Compaq and Hewlett-Packard introduced new back-to-school lines in late June, neither company has substantially cut prices on existing models. It's simple supply-and-demand economics, said International Data Corp. analyst Roger Kay.

"Despite seasonal sluggishness, PC demand is high," he said. "Why should PC vendors sell cheaper systems when they can make more?"

With higher component costs, a heavily saturated consumer market, and many buyers choosing a second PC, major manufacturers are pushing heftier rather than cheaper systems.

A good example is Compaq, which last year fought a bitter contest with Emachines over sub-$600 PCs. But Compaq this year has beefed up systems and is slowly raising its average selling price in the process.

Since last summer, Compaq's average retail selling price has increased more than $100, reaching $943 in May, according to PC Data. In comparison, retail leader HP's average selling price was $907 in May.

The component crunch also is taking its toll, forcing PC manufacturers to hold fast to higher prices. Dell, for example, has been struggling to keep revenues on track, despite higher component costs and supply problems.

Screen shortages, for example, have helped keep prices of notebooks and LCD monitors high. For example, a 13-inch TFT flat panel screen, the type found on notebooks, costs manufacturers $500.

This has helped keep notebook price tags fairly high, despite falling prices for other components. In May, the price tag of the average notebook sold at retail, which includes online and catalog sales, was $1,901. Those sold in stores averaged $1,579.

Although gauging the overall market trend is difficult, in the short term, analysts predict slower summer sales as bargain hunters leave stores empty-handed. IDC doesn't expect any price cuts, but the market researcher does anticipate PC sales to pick up with the back-to-school buying season.

"There was seasonality back there in 1998; there just hasn't been seasonality recently because of new products introduced in early 1999 and the nearly free PC moment last summer," Kay said. "That kept demand unusually high for all of 1999."



To: kemble s. matter who wrote (158393)7/8/2000 12:07:18 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176388
 
Compaq signs major laptop deal with Taiwan's Quanta

FRIDAY, JULY 7, 2000 11:49:00 PM EST
Jul. 07, 2000 (Electronic Buyers News - CMP via COMTEX) -- Taipei, Taiwan - Quanta Computer Inc. for the first time has joined the supply chain of Compaq Computer Corp., suggesting that Taiwan's leading laptop-PC makers are putting distance between themselves and their second-tier rivals.

Beginning in September, Compaq will purchase about 50,000 of its new consumer-notebook models from Quanta each month, according to analysts and local reports citing Rosemary W. Ho, vice chairperson of Compaq's offices here.

The deal appears to have dashed the hopes of second-tier player Arima Computer Corp., which had been Compaq's only supplier of consumer systems on the island. In fact, Arima had become largely dependent on Compaq's business, with about 90% of its sales last year coming from the Houston-based PC manufacturer.

The decision is part of an ongoing change in the contract market here, as the cozy supply relationships Taiwan's smaller systems makers once enjoyed with their customers are buckling under cost and time-to-market pressures.

"With the notebook-PC industry being mature, second-tier companies like Arima will see their growth potential limited by their larger competitors," said Yang Yahui-hui, an analyst at Core Pacific Securities Investment Trust Corp. "Wooing foreign customers is getting harder for second-tier vendors since they can't compete in [terms of] technology and economies of scale."

Quanta's victory underscores Taiwan's volatile sourcing and procurement environment, where OEM purchasers and supply-chain managers are constantly searching for new partners that can better meet their needs and help slash costs. That forces laptop-PC makers to cut prices to vie for manufacturing contracts.

"Quanta won the deal because it's able to offer more competitive prices and better performance than any rivals on the island," said Sharon Su, an analyst at ABN AMRO Asia Ltd.

Even companies like Quanta, which is considered one of the top three notebook-PC makers in the industry, are not immune to rivals' tactics. In April, Dell Computer Corp., a longtime Quanta customer, said it would shift a large chunk of its notebook-PC production to Taiwan's largest computer maker, Acer Inc., because Quanta's prices were not competitive, according to sources. Those shipments will begin next year.

When the dust kicked up by the OEM shuffle finally settles, Taiwan's PC makers are apt to find themselves working for considerably lower margins, a phenomenon that is affecting companies of all sizes here.

The gross margin for Quanta and other first-tier players slumped to 10% in the first quarter, a huge drop from more than 20% in 1998, Su said. The situation for second-tier manufacturers has become even worse, she added.

"The shrinking margin is an industrywide problem," said a spokeswoman at Quanta.

To help bolster profits, companies are diversifying into mobile phones or information appliances (IAs), which they believe have a better margin structure.

Compal Electronics Inc., another first-tier PC maker, is expanding its cell-phone output. Acer will shift its focus to IA products, said the company's president, Simon Lin. Quanta made a similar move last month when it launched a Web pad that uses Crusoe microprocessors designed by Transmeta Corp., Santa Clara, Calif.

Quanta declined to comment on the terms of the deal with Compaq, saying only that it is the company's strategy to seek new clients all the time. "We'll be adding more customers and shipping more products throughout the year," the spokeswoman said. Quanta expects to ship 3.3 million notebook PCs this year, compared with about 2.8 million last year, according to the company.

Under the agreement, which focuses on the area of sub-$1,000 laptops, Quanta will fulfill a small portion of Compaq's ongoing plan to buy $8.5 billion worth of Taiwan-made electronic products this year. The company also will pay Compaq $15 million to build an Internet infrastructure for Quanta's new TFT LCD factory, according to local reports.

www2.marketwatch.com{B940E0F6-785C-4FE7-B339-38A9D044ED28}

By: Faith Hung Copyright 2000 CMP Media Inc



To: kemble s. matter who wrote (158393)7/8/2000 10:04:29 AM
From: OLDTRADER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176388
 
KEMBLE:Love your reliable enthusiasm.I see 60 soon,could be wrong but believe the "breakout" yesterday signals fat-city times ahead for all DELLHEADS!



To: kemble s. matter who wrote (158393)7/8/2000 10:07:52 AM
From: OLDTRADER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176388
 
PS:Don't you get a kick out of the CPQ forces persistent hyping of that dead cat-did we call that one or not!Remember my call three years ago -"Dead in our time".