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To: PCSS who wrote (35214)10/22/1998 12:43:00 PM
From: John Koligman  Respond to of 97611
 
CDW announced strong results. From what I know of them they do a significant business in CPQ products, so this news may bode well for CPQ also, although I wonder if the comment about 'product shortages' also refers to CPQ based on what we have heard in the recent past...

John

CDW nabs more PC sales
By Jim Davis
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 22, 1998, 8:40 a.m. PT

CDW Computer Centers, a major catalog and
online computer dealer, reported record earnings of
$17.1 million on sales of $462.7 million for its
just-completed quarter, another indication of the
growing appeal of shopping from home.

While sales results at many consumer electronics
and computer superstore retailers are expanding at
a tepid rate, mail order and direct sales operations
continue to garner the lion's share of growth in an
increasingly cutthroat PC market.

CDW reported that net sales for the third quarter
increased 43 percent to $462.7 million from
$323.9 million during the same quarter in 1997.
Net income for the quarter rose 32 percent to
$17.1 million from $13.0 million in the year-ago
third quarter. Third-quarter earnings per diluted
share were $0.79, and increase of 32 percent over
the same period a year ago.

Overall, unit sales growth at mail order and online
dealers is outpacing computer superstores such as
CompUSA, consumer electronics retailers such as
Best Buy, and mass merchant retailers such as
Sears, according to research from International
Data Corporation.

CDW competes with other on-line resellers such as
Insight Direct, NECX, and MicroWarehouse.

Through the first half of 1998, mail order resellers
expanded PC unit sales at an average of 19
percent, compared to the same period a year ago.
In comparison, computer superstores grew at 6.6
percent, consumer electronics stores gained 4.5
percent, and office products superstores advanced
just 3.5 percent.

CompUSA, the nation's largest PC retailer, is in the
process of digesting the Computer City acquisition,
and at the same time they are suffering from falling
average selling prices, according to analysts.
T-Zone, a well-funded retail chain with tight
connections to Asian manufacturers, closed its
doors earlier this year.

CDW, meanwhile, has made moves to insulate
itself from some of the trends affecting the rest of
the industry.

"We were challenged during the quarter by limited
product availability from certain vendors. The
diversity of our vendors and product mix enabled
us to overcome this issue," said Greg Zeman,
CDW's president, in a statement. Analysts agree
with the assessment.

"CDW has a broader range of products to offer, so
they are not as exposed to declines in profit
margins in hardware as some other competitors,"
explained Charles Smulders, an analyst with
Dataquest.

The company's online sales are growing, too.
Traffic to the company's Web site increased 21.3
percent from the previous quarter and generated
net sales in excess of $28.0 million in the quarter,
executives said.

But Smulders expects CDW will run into increased
Web competition from online-only resellers such as
BuyComp.com, which have lower overhead costs
and therefore can offer lower prices. Where CDW
will continue to remain competitive is in selling to
larger settings such as government and education.
where a dedicated telephone sales force is
required.

The trend clearly continues toward serving
consumers and businesses online, forcing some
measure of consolidation in the retail industry.
CompUSA has been closing Computer City stores
in markets where it already has a presence. Just last
week Inca Computer, a Michigan-based reseller
with bold plans to open up 300 stores nationwide,
reportedly closed six stores outside of its home
state, citing a credit crunch resulting from recent
stock market instability.




To: PCSS who wrote (35214)10/22/1998 12:51:00 PM
From: Bipin Prasad  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
Revisiting 29 again, 29 1/16 and on we go.

InSook