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To: Skeeter Bug who wrote (2205)4/21/1999 11:59:00 PM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 3813
 
Yup, I did and pretty darn happy about it. Thanks.

regards,

sf



To: Skeeter Bug who wrote (2205)4/26/1999 1:23:00 AM
From: Steve Fancy  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3813
 
PC Shipments Rose 19% In Quarter Despite Compaq Losing Market Share

Dow Jones Online News, Monday, April 26, 1999 at 00:48
(Published on Sunday, April 25, 1999 at 21:46)

By David P. Hamilton, Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
Unexpectedly strong consumer demand fueled another acceleration in
personal-computer shipments in the first quarter, although struggling
Compaq Computer Corp. lost market share to competitors, according to two
major research firms.
The findings of International Data Corp. and Gartner Group Inc.'s
Dataquest unit show that the PC market remains far healthier than some
investors have feared following a significant drop in first-quarter
profit at No. 1 Compaq. They also suggest that rapidly falling PC prices
have spurred more consumers into the market, even as some companies slow
PC purchases in response to the year-2000 computer bug.
"It was pretty much a Compaq-specific problem rather than an
industrywide problem," said David Stremba, a Dataquest analyst, who
added that Compaq was a bit slow to lower its prices. "It looks like
they misread the quarter early on and thought it was an industrywide
slowdown," he said.
Overall, IDC found that world-wide PC shipments grew 19% in the
quarter from the year earlier, to 24.5 million units, well above its
earlier estimate of 14% growth. Dataquest reported robust growth of 17%
in the quarter, to 25 million units. The two firms' estimates frequently
differ because of the different methodologies they use.
PC prices, which have plunged below $600 in some cases, drove strong
U.S. consumer sales. IDC, of Framingham, Mass., estimated that U.S. PC
shipments rose 24% in the quarter, while Dataquest, of San Jose, Calif.,
figured they rose 21%. Sales in Europe and Japan were also strong,
despite economic uncertainty in both areas.
Corporate PC sales, while steady, weren't out of the ordinary, the
firms said. "Overall, the corporate market was solid, but not as strong
as we'd like it to be," said John Brown, an analyst at IDC. "We think
there's still some hesitation" due to the year-2000 problem, which has
prompted some companies to shift computer spending into fixing the bug.
Compaq still sells more PCs than any other company, but its grip on
the No. 1 slot no longer looks so firm. Compaq's world-wide market share
dropped to 13% from 14%, according to Dataquest. Dataquest estimated
that the Houston-based computer maker saw its PC shipments rise only
10%, compared with overall market growth of 17%. IDC reported similar
findings, although it saw a smaller drop in Compaq's market share.
By contrast, Dell Computer Corp. and International Business Machines
Corp. roared ahead. Dell saw its world-wide shipments rise by half in
the quarter, both firms reported, propelling it past IBM into second
place and significantly narrowing Compaq's lead. Third-place IBM didn't
do so badly itself, with a roughly 30% increase in shipments.
Fourth-place Hewlett-Packard Co. slipped slightly on a world-wide
basis, but did well in the U.S., where it gained a point of market share
and boosted shipments roughly 40%. Apple Computer Inc. continued its
recovery with a banner quarter; while its world-wide market share still
hovers at 3.4%, that is up from 3.1% a year earlier, IDC's Mr. Brown
said.
Copyright (c) 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.