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Politics : Formerly About Applied Materials -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Shoibal Datta who wrote (50372)8/10/2001 2:43:35 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Respond to of 70976
 
IDC: PC slump to last until 2003
Thursday August 09 01:15 PM EDT
By John G. Spooner, ZDNet News
The market research company has yet to release its final second-quarter figures for PC
shipments, but it is already offering a more dire prediction for market growth.

IDC has yet to release its final second-quarter figures for PC
shipments, but the market researcher is already offering a more
dire prediction for market growth.

When IDC released its preliminary second-quarter numbers last month, it
had forecast a slight increase in the fourth quarter of this year and a
turnaround beginning in the first half of 2002.

Now, the second-quarter data looks worse than previously expected. As a
result, IDC will lower its PC market forecast and extend its expectations for a decline in the U.S. and
European markets somewhat further into 2002.

The company is now predicting that sizable recoveries of key markets, including the United States, will
not occur until 2003, though a small amount of growth is still expected for 2002. Troubles in Japan
may last longer.

"We're lowering our forecast because the consumer market and the economies around the world are
still weak," said Loren Loverde, director of IDC's Worldwide PC Tracker Service.

Not all regions will recover at the same pace, he added.

"It's different for different regions. For some, we're looking at a more substantial recovery in 2003," he
said.

At the moment, IDC is still finalizing the second-quarter figures and expects to release them by month's
end. But several areas are cause for concern.

These include the worldwide consumer PC market and the Japanese PC market. Forecasts for the
U.S. and European markets will also be slightly lower than the earlier forecasts.

In a word, the U.S. market next year will likely be "slow," Loverde said.

Of more major concern is Japan. The country's PC shipments fell off dramatically in the second
quarter, causing IDC to lower expectations for Asia as a whole.

"The (Japanese) market was much softer than we expected," Loverde said.

Meanwhile, weaker-than-expected consumer PC shipments indicate that the rate at which people are
buying their next computer is slowing, at least while economic uncertainty persists in many countries,
Loverde said.

"Given the economic environment, people are postponing purchases," he said.

Meanwhile, the release this fall of Microsoft's Windows XP (news - web sites) operating system might
not provide as much of a boost as some have been expecting.

"We're uncertain that Windows XP will notably accelerate the market, based on the economy," he
said. "We're skeptical that it will provide that much kick for the market."

This is not to say that there won't be some growth in the PC market in the second half of this year,
Loverde said. It's just that his company does not consider a relatively small amount of growth to be a
recovery.

"We do expect some sequential growth," Loverde said. "But if you compare it to a year ago, especially
in the U.S., it's going to be negative."



To: Shoibal Datta who wrote (50372)8/12/2001 12:24:38 PM
From: Shoibal Datta  Respond to of 70976
 
Is There Life in the Bubble?
Although stock prices are way down from their peak, they’re still high by historical standards - Robert J. Samuelson

msnbc.com