To: Kenya AA who wrote (42615 ) 1/8/1999 8:18:00 AM From: Elwood P. Dowd Respond to of 97611
wsj article on lower priced pc's (Part 2) by: soltrader (48/F/Toronto) 48594 of 48602 For retailers, the increased unit sales don't mean a boom year for the bottom line. Average prices fell to $1,015, down 22% from year-earlier levels and reflecting the spread of home PCs beyond affluent families. Research MarketMaps LLC, New Canaan, Conn., estimates 49.5% of U.S. households own a PC, up from 43% at the end of 1997. "People buying PCs now are not willing to spend as much as the early adopters," said Vadim Zlotnikov, PC analyst at Sanford C. Berstein & Co. But, he said, newer buyers' interest in purchasing a PC to get to the Internet bode well for continued demand. PC demand drove sales at stores open at least a year to double-digit gains at electronics giants Circuit City Stores Inc. and Best Buy Co. Best Buy, which saw a $399 model sell out almost immediately after its introduction, "had extremely good sales on low-priced PCs," says a spokeswoman. PCs were the best-performing product at Circuit City, fueling an 11% hike in same-store sales. Circuit City, which reported results Thursday, said total sales rose 18% to $1.57 billion. Even as cheap PCs drove demand, the falling price tags squeezed sales at CompUSA Inc. and Tandy Corp., which had hoped for stronger sales of higher-priced models. CompUSA, Dallas, said same-store sales tumbled a larger-than-expected 4.7% in December from a year earlier, and it issued a profit warning. "Consumers got a great buy," says Chief Executive Jim Halpin, who says the retailer was forced to discount during the month. Tandy, Fort Worth, Texas, saw November same-store sales flattened compared with the year-earlier period, and it stayed out of the low-priced fray. It said same-store sales for December rise a tepid 5%. Selling through its Radio Shack chain, Tandy's lowest-priced model was a $999 PC without a monitor or printer. Total December sales rose 6% to $587.2 million, helped mainly by strong sales of wireless telephones. By contrast, Dell Vice President Paul Bell says buyers were loading up on such extras as digital cameras and scanners to take photos and send digital images over the Internet. Dell said this year's best sellers had twice the memory and about twice as much storage as last year's. Likewise, Bart R. Brown, vice president of marketing for Gateway's U.S. consumer business, said the company hasn't "experienced a terribly dramatic slip in average unit price." New buyers also tend to spur ownership among their peers, say analysts. "If I have a PC, my friends may purchase one to talk to me," says Bill Ablondi, researcher at MarketMaps. "There's a snowball effect building up here."