Taiwan-based pc producer Acer stated that non-public pc demand is rebounding, after hitting the underside this yr.
“We have seen the demand reach the bottom during about the May timeframe this year and ever since that, the demand has come back. For Q3, we have already seen year-to-year growth,” chairman and CEO Jason Chen informed CNBC’s Emily Tan.
In the third quarter, Acer’s pocket book income grew 19.4% in comparison with the earlier quarter, whereas its desktop income grew 27.8% in the identical interval.
Acer is the world’s fifth-largest participant within the PC market with a 6.4% market share, in line with Canalys. China’s Lenovo leads with 22.9%, adopted by HP (21.6%), Dell (16.6%) and Apple (11%).
The newest Canalys knowledge confirmed the worldwide PC market noticed a slower decline within the second quarter, with complete shipments of desktops and notebooks down 11.5% year-on-year to 62.1 million items. For the final two quarters, shipments declined by over 30%.
The Covid-19 pandemic led to a surge in distant working and home-based studying, which in flip fueled demand for private computer systems equivalent to desktops, laptops and notebooks. But the growth in PC gross sales got here to an finish, when international PC shipments declined sharply within the first quarter of 2022.
An unsure financial surroundings, with climbing rates of interest and rising inflation, additionally brought on shoppers to rein in spending, impacting the gross sales of computer systems.
Established in 1976, Acer makes a spread of PC and non-PC merchandise together with laptops, desktops and tablets. It additionally manufactures displays, sensible gadgets in addition to electrical bikes and scooters. Acer’s main manufacturing base is in China, whereas it additionally produces in Southeast Asia, Taiwan, Japan, Korea and India, in line with the agency.
“PCs today, together with the display business, monitor business, is contributing about two-thirds of our business. For the future, we believe depends on seasonality, but we think the non-PC area will go all the way up to one-third and maybe beyond,” Chen stated in an interview aired Friday.
The Taiwanese tech agency is optimistic that the PC market can be “back to normal” by the fourth quarter.
“On Q4, we believe the PC [market] will come back to seasonality. First half will be less than 50%. And second half will be bigger than first half, for at least the foreseeable future,” stated Chen.
“We [will be] basically back to normal. And the main reason for that is the inventory of the channel is pretty much depleted, at least for us in a healthy way.”
Source: www.cnbc.com”