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To: freeus who wrote (47210)6/11/1998 1:44:00 PM
From: Dell-icious  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176387
 
$299 PCs! Here are excerpts from an article on thestreet.com:
thestreet.com
I wonder what DELL plans to do about this?

Herb on TheStreet: Just When You Thought
Prices Had Stopped Falling -- Get Ready for
$299 PCs

By Herb Greenberg
Senior Columnist
6/11/98 9:12 AM ET

Is that the sound of crunching PC margins in the background? Quite
possibly. It's all hush-hush, but I hear from normally reliable sources that
four Taiwanese PC makers are planning to announce as early as next
week at PC Expo in New York a new line of desktop PCs priced at $299,
$399 and $499. Currently, the cheapest models cost around $700. If all
goes well, the ultracheap PCs should be rolled out at retail in time for
back-to-school. Each machine supposedly will use a 233-megahertz Cyrix
chip, with the cheapest model sporting a black-and-white monitor.

Execs of Acer have been talking for months of their desire to roll out a
$300 PC. But such low prices hadn't been expected for at least another
year. "Nobody is quite ready for those kinds of price points," says hardware
analyst Stephen Baker at PC Data, which has been predicting that
two-thirds of all PCs sold in the fourth quarter will be priced below $1,000
-- double the number sold in that price range a year earlier.

Today, however, the typical storefront PC shop can build and sell a decent
machine for as little as $500 -- not benefiting from the lower prices
associated with mass production.

Which companies will be behind the cuts? The only clue: A story in
Wednesday's AsiaBizTech news service reported that Acer, Leo Computer
Systems, Synnex Technology and Mitac International were slashing the
prices of computers equipped with Intel's (INTC:Nasdaq) Pentium II to
around $800.

Some analysts say that such rapidly falling prices may spark demand -- at
least initially -- but not enough to offset the cuts. Not good news for an
industry still trying to unclog a stuffed pipeline of higher-priced
merchandise.