Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

In shift, Q2 PC sales up 2.4%; tablets beginning to disrupt?

By | August 4, 2011, 8:24am PDT

Summary: PC shipments see an unexpected rise in Q2 and the industry as a whole deviates from historical trends. Economic uncertainty, the rise of tablets, or both? Here are the numbers.

Global shipments of PCs during the second quarter of 2011 were up 2.4 percent, deviating from previous historical trends and prompting the question: are tablets beginning to disrupt the market?

Disruption was certainly the theme in a new research report from consulting firm Jon Peddie, where the report’s author admits that Q2 shipments “did not behave according to past years with regard to seasonality,” defining 2011 as a whole as “an anomalous year” thanks to various recovery strategies after the 2008-09 economic downtown.

Or is it?

Here’s a look at the highlights for Q2 2011:

  • Total PC shipments increased 6.3 percent, significantly above the 10-year average of 3.5%, prompting inventory concerns.
  • More than 84 million PCs shipped worldwide in 2Q11, an increase of 2.4% compared to 1Q11.
  • In the same period, graphics saw a 6.3 percent increase. The upswing “could be an inventory buildup and have a negative impact on Q3 or Q4.”
  • Year over year, Intel saw market share growth (14.7%), AMD dropped 14.2% and Nvidia slipped 18.4%. Similar trends were seen quarter over quarter.
  • Intel saw a 21 percent average growth in Desktops and Notebooks, thanks to its Embedded Processor Graphics CPU. EPG saw 41% growth quarter over quarter.
  • Meanwhile, AMD’s HPU saw 80% growth quarter to quarter for desktops and notebooks.
  • IPads and Android tablets “have probably cannibalized” some netbook sales.

Is the inventory buildup due to early back-to-school preparation, or channel stuffing? Peddie wasn’t sure, but admitted otherwise that “tablets have changed the nature of the PC market” — that is to say, we’re not sure if they’re actually eating into sales, but they may be affecting seasonal ups and downs.

(At least, that’s how I’m reading this. But I’m no analyst!)

To wit:

Since the crash of 2009, combined with the introduction and influence of ARM-based Tablets, the PC market has deviated from historical trends. Until the segment for Tablets is clearly defined the fluctuations in the market data is likely to continue. The disruptions probably won’t settle down for a while as Tablets find their place in the market and agreement can be reached on to include them in the PC market analysis, or to not include them.

Another question: is the usual PC cycle finally seeing measurable influence from the mobile sector? Hard to say, but it’s clear that the entire industry continues to be in flux — and that the numbers (and the methodologies) may require deeper scrutiny.

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Topics

Andrew J. Nusca is associate editor of ZDNet and editor of SmartPlanet.

Disclosure

Andrew Nusca

Andrew J. Nusca does not hold any investments in the technology companies he covers.

Biography

Andrew Nusca

Editor

Andrew J. Nusca is an associate editor at ZDNet and editor of SmartPlanet. As a journalist based in New York City, he has written for Popular Mechanics and Men's Vogue and his byline has appeared in New York magazine, The Huffington Post, New York Daily News, Editor & Publisher, New York Press and many others. He also writes The Editorialiste, a media criticism blog.

He is a New York University graduate and former news editor and columnist of the Washington Square News. He is a graduate of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He has been named "Howard Kurtz, Jr." by film critic John Lichman despite having no relation to him. He lives in his native Philadelphia with his wife, cat and Boston Terrier.

Follow him on Twitter.

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RE: In shift, Q2 PC sales up 2.4%; tablets beginning to disrupt?
bjterry62 5th Aug
Yes! Tablets have absolutely positively confirmed the total number of fingerprints you can fit on a 10" screen.

BT
0 Votes
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Not surprising
William Farrell 4th Aug
since for some a tablet will do, while others may have bought a tablet believing it will equally replace a netbook.

Time will be the factor, as I agree, it's too early to say conclusively one way or the other.
I don't see how the tablet played any factor in this. PC sales are up and tablets are replacing PCs from what I read on ZDNet. Tablets have very little to do with anything.
@LoverockDavidson Next headline from ZDNet: "Jersey Shore ratings up 2.4%; hatred of The Jersey Shore beginning to affect ratings?"

Maybe what they should read into it is that PC sales are up because a percentage of people who tried getting by with just a tablet gave up and went and bought a PC. happy
Based on net stats and Google Android Market stats, the iPad is the only tablet that is actually ending up in end user hands.
@Bruizer Where are all the other tablets going? Area 51?
No matter how much Zdnet and other publications wish it to be, tablets are not a general trend. It's just another toy for the Apple zombies, who will pay anything and buy anything from that company. Tablets were around prior to Apple, but nobody could find any use for them back then, and they still can't find any use for anything other than iPads now. Android tablets are a colossal failure.
Yes! Tablets have absolutely positively confirmed the total number of fingerprints you can fit on a 10" screen.

BT

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