Special Report:Global Financial Crisis
A model poses with a laptop during the CeBIT computer fair in Hanover March 3, 2009. (Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
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SAN FRANCISCO, Mar. 5 (Chinese media) -- Global personal
computer (PC) shipments will drop over 8 percent in the first half of 2009, but
will gradually improve to a small positive growth in the fourth quarter,
resulting in a 4.5-percent decrease for the year, market research company IDC
predicted on Thursday.
The prospect is worse than IDC's earlier forecast. In
last December, it projected that worldwide PC shipments will grow 3.8 percent in
2009.
According to IDC's updates of the PC market,
worldwide PC shipments decreased 1.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2008
following five years of almost uninterrupted double-digit growth.
Gartner, another research company, this week painted
a similar, somewhat grimmer picture, saying global PC shipments are expected to
suffer sharpest decline of 11.9 percent in 2009.
However, IDC also expressed some optimism about the
PC industry.
"To be sure, the PC market is in for a bumpy ride,"
Loren Loverde, an IDC director, said in a statement.
"Nevertheless, there are a number of reasons why the
PC market will not fare dramatically worse in the current environment than it
did in the 2001 recession -- even if the current economic environment is notably
worse," he said.
"Pricing will become even more aggressive, and there
will be further consolidation, but the PC industry will not go the way of the
financial or auto industries in this cycle," he noted.
PCs are now far more important and cost half what it
did in 2000 and prices continue to drop at a rapid rate, making PCs more
affordable and less likely to be sacrificed in tough times, IDC said.
Today's PC market is also more driven by replacements
than it used to be. A larger share of existing systems will need to be replaced
sooner, IDC said, adding that portable computers have risen to account for half
the PC market share, which typically have a shorter lifespan than desktops.
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