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To: Lucretius who wrote (74542)10/26/1998 10:25:00 AM
From: Zeem  Respond to of 176387
 
Your right LT, now 59 1/2 RT!



To: Lucretius who wrote (74542)10/26/1998 10:26:00 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 176387
 
LT...most quotes are stale by the time they are posted ...funny how all things change from moment to moment.....we mere mortals...seem to CLING to OUR VIEWS as IF they were TRUTH.......IMPERMANENCE is the TRUTH........wait and SEE..........:).... Stay Well.. LT.TL



To: Lucretius who wrote (74542)10/26/1998 10:27:00 AM
From: Techie  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 176387
 
Good news:
"Compaq remained the No. 1 PC supplier, both in the world
and in the United States, while IBM regained the No. 2 world
rank and after slipping to third behind fast-growing Dell in
the second quarter, the survey's preliminary data showed."

full article:

-- Global turmoil fails to slow Q3 PC industry growth --
By Eric Auchard
NEW YORK, Oct 26 (Reuters) - Quarterly surveys by two
technology market research firms showed that economic turmoil
in the Asia/Pacific region, Russia and Latin America failed to
slow the strong growth of personal computer sales in Western
Europe and the United States.
Worldwide personal computer industry shipments picked up
pace in the third quarter as 22.6 million computers were
produced -- 14 to 15 percent more than the year-ago third
quarter -- as the industry worked off a build-up of excess
inventory that sapped growth in 1998's first half.
Compaq remained the No. 1 PC supplier, both in the world
and in the United States, while IBM regained the No. 2 world
rank and after slipping to third behind fast-growing Dell in
the second quarter, the survey's preliminary data showed.
"Though some regions of the world continue to confirm the
dampening effects of the financial turmoil in Asia/Pacific,
worldwide PC unit growth remains healthy," Dataquest analyst
Bill Schaub said.
"Combined shipments in the U.S. and Europe comprise nearly
60 percent of the world's demand for PCs, and these two regions
are experiencing exceptional PC unit growth," he said.
In the United States, market researchers divided over the
rate of growth, with International Data Corp. estimating a 14
percent annual rate in the third quarter and Gartner Group
Inc.'s <IT.N> Dataquest calculating 18 percent growth.
At that rate, the U.S. market will continue on track to
have a majority of American households owning at least one
computer by the end of 1998. Dataquest forecasts that 51
percent of all U.S. homes will own a PC this year versus 43
percent in 1997.
The direct PC distributors, Dell and Gateway, showed the
strongest growth both worldwide and in the United States.
Compaq shipments actually declined 8 percent year-to-year,
although this reflected the huge backlog of computers shipped
to distributors ahead of the 1997 holiday season that led to a
glut Compaq has only recently worked its way out from under.
Taking advantage of its efficient direct-to-the-customer
sales approach, Dell grew above 60 percent, several times the
rate of IBM's growth, foreshadowing a battle for the No. 2
world rank if both companies' shipments continue to rise at
their current rates.
Gateway eclipsed one-time U.S. retail PC leader Packard
Bell NEC to snag the No. 5 rank both worldwide and
domestically.
But the survey findings revived criticism by some PC makers
and Wall Street brokers who argue that the quarterly research
data continues to understate the global growth in PCs actually
purchased by customers, which one analyst put at 20 percent.
The two leading PC market research firms count shipments
into distribution channels or direct to computer users. They do
not track sales out of indirect distribution channels, say from
a retailer to a final customer.
Nor do they measure revenues, which Schaub noted, were
"pretty flat" in the third quarter, as several PC makers
boosted the portion of cheaper PCs priced less than $1,000 that
they sold, causing average selling prices to drop year-to-year.
Compaq spokesman Alan Hodel said that while third-quarter
shipments fell 8 percent from a year ago, they grew 30 percent
versus the 1998 second quarter and by 38 percent measured in
terms of final customer sales, not initial shipments.
Adjusting the figures to reflect what Compaq and IBM have
was were their sales to final customers, PC shipments grew 20
percent worldwide in the third quarter, not the 15 percent
reported by IDC, Bear Stearns PC analyst Andrew Neff said.
"Reports of the death of the computer industry have
certainly been exaggerated," Neff wrote in remarks to investors
ahead of the public release of the market share data.
He noted that third-quarter PC shipments and better-than-
expected financial results reported for the quarter by Intel,
IBM, Microsoft and others in recent weeks suggest that at least
among the industry leaders, solid growth continues.
<CPQ.N> <IBM.N> <DELL.O> <HWP.N> <GTW.N> <IT.N> <MSFT.O>
<INTC.O>
((-- Eric Auchard, New York newsdesk, 212-859-1840))
REUTERS