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PC market stops declining, for now

John G. Spooner and Michael Kanellos CNET News.com

Published: 18 Oct 2002 13:51 BST

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The PC market is far from healthy, but for the moment, at least, it has stopped shrinking.

PC shipments worldwide grew by 3.8 percent in the third quarter compared with the same period a year ago, according to IDC, the first increase after five straight quarters of year-to-year declines. A small increase may occur in the fourth quarter as well, the market researcher added.

The latest quarter also marked the return of Dell Computer to the top of the PC pile. The company surpassed Hewlett-Packard, which became the top PC maker in worldwide shipments last quarter, owing to its acquisition of Compaq Computer.

The recent gain in PC shipments isn't cause for too much celebration, however. PC shipments grew by only 6 percent from the second quarter -- lower than the historical average of 9.2 percent. Growth from the third quarter to the fourth also is expected to be in the single digits and below historical levels. Intel and Apple Computer warned earlier this week that fourth-quarter sales could be flat to slightly higher.

Research company Gartner Dataquest said shipments in the third quarter rose 5.8 percent worldwide. However, if the disruption caused by the 11 September terrorist attacks is factored into last year's numbers, year-over-year sales were flat, the company said.

"The seasonal pattern (of shipment increases) is there, but it's much more muted than usual," said Roger Kay, an analyst at IDC.

Even if the industry growth spurt is short-lived, the third-quarter numbers continued to underscore Dell's growing dominance in PCs. The Austin, Texas-based PC maker accounted for 16 percent of the desktops, notebooks and Intel- and AMD-based servers shipped during the quarter. Dell saw its worldwide shipments grow by 23 percent worldwide compared with the same period a year ago, according to IDC.

In contrast, HP's shipments shrunk by 4.9 percent, leaving it with a 15.5 percent market share. The two companies combined shipped about 10 million PCs, but Dell shipped 200,000 more, said Kay.

Gartner Dataquest's data showed Dell and HP neck and neck, separated by a tenth of a point with market shares of 15.8 percent and 15.7 percent, respectively. A tenth of a point represents about 30,000 units, Gartner Dataquest said.


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