PC shipments grew by 3.7 percent in Europe, Middle East, and Africa (EMEA) in the fourth quarter of 2002 compared with the same quarter last year, leading to a modest 1.9 percent growth for the full year 2002, reported IDC.
Intense vendor competition and continued price declines across all product categories helped stimulate demand, adversely impacting growth in terms of revenue and industry margins. The market remained affected by slow demand overall, and Intel price cuts in November along with aggressive vendor pricing strategies across all channels clearly helped stimulate both consumer and business purchases.
Without this, the market would have fallen back to negative trends. The corporate market continued to display very slow investment patterns, with only a few essential renewals taking place, and no major rebound is expected before the second half of 2003.
Adding to budget constraints, a ‘wait-and-see’ stance among businesses on new products also contributed to continuing very slow corporate notebook sales. The SMB market remained more buoyant, but was very much driven by fierce vendor competition and consequent price declines.
On the consumer side, notebook sales remained buoyant, driven by low and very attractive pricing in the retail channel with fierce competition among vendors; however, this did not make up for the lack of desktop demand or aid overall consumer market growth.
In line with forecasts, notebooks continued to display double-digit growth at over 14 percent year-on-year and remained a key area of intense competition between vendors in both the consumer and the SMB space.
Mobile products will continue to represent the largest growth opportunity in EMEA as wireless developments and a rebound in corporate rollouts will drive stronger double-digit growth in 2003. However, prices are expected to continue declining.
While HP and Dell continued to drive pressure on the market, the competitive landscape has intensified in the fourth quarter.
With Acer taking the fourth position in the overall EMEA ranking, and second position in the notebook space, along with the strong positions held by regional/local players across most countries, this fiercely competitive environment will continue to shape the PC market in 2003. In a context of slow demand where pricing will remain a key volume generation weapon, vendor competition is not expected to soften in 2003.
HP maintained the gap and a clear leadership in EMEA; however, the vendor declined by 11 percent compared with the combined shipments of HP and Compaq in the same period last year.
Considering the scale of the merger and fierce competition from all sides, the leader's aggressive pricing strategy and a well executed transition enabled HP to maintain over a 20 percent share in the EMEA market for the year 2002. — (menareport.com)
© 2003 Mena Report (www.menareport.com)