As Expected, PC Sales Drop Before Windows 8 Launch

Analysts from Gartner and IDC say that PC sales dropped about 8.45 percent in the third quarter of 2012, the most precipitous drop in PC sales since 2001. And both firms agree on the cause, too: The market is preparing for the launch of Microsoft’s ambitious new Windows 8, which will dramatically and permanently move the PC market closer to that of mobile devices.

“The third quarter was a transitional quarter before Microsoft's Windows 8 operating system release, so shipments were less vigorous as vendors and their channel partners liquidated inventory,” Mikako Kitagawa explained in Gartner’s report about third-quarter PC sales.

"We expected a weak PC market in the lead up to Windows 8 release in the fourth quarter,” David Daoud noted in IDC’s report about third-quarter PC sales. “While the industry has been focused on shaving excess inventory and preparing to launch a new generation of products, consumers have been looking at alternative devices like tablets. Nevertheless, as vendors line up innovative new products and designs, consumers are likely to respond positively during the tail end of 4Q12, and that means a potential return to positive growth at the end of this year.”

Aside from the nosedive in overall PC sales, this quarter was significant because it marks the first time ThinkPad-maker Lenovo edged out struggling HP for the top spot. By all accounts, it won’t be the last: HP CEO Meg Whitman revealed recently that she expects her company to reel for a few more years before order is restored. And Lenovo, unlike HP, is embracing the PC-plus world of the future by announcing a full lineup of tablets and hybrid devices based on Windows 8 and Windows RT. HP had been the number-one PC maker in the world since 2006.

Averaging the two firms’ numbers, as is my custom, we see that PC makers overall sold 87.6 million PCs in the quarter. The top five PC makers worldwide are Lenovo (13.8 million units), HP (13.75 million), Dell (9.3 million), Acer (8.5 million), and ASUS (6.4 million).

In the United States, as always, the picture is dramatically different, with Apple making an appearance in the top five. Again averaging the firms’ numbers, we see that an estimated 15.8 million PCs were sold in the United States during the third quarter of 2012. The top five PC makers in the United States are HP (4.2 million units), Dell (3.3 million), Apple (2 million), Lenovo (1.4 million), and Acer (1 million).

Looking ahead, there are of course questions, and they begin with Windows 8, a confusing new platform from Microsoft that—despite its name—actually bridges the mobile computing world with the traditional PC market. But Gartner claims that although tech-savvy Americans are debating tablet purchases and a coming generation of hybrid devices, the real growth in the PC arena of the near future will be due to emerging markets. Almost 70 percent of PC sales are expected to come from emerging markets in 2016, up from about 50 percent in 2011.

Microsoft, somewhat infamously, is bullish about the future and about Windows 8 specifically. Microsoft Vice President Keith Lorizio said earlier this week that his company expects to sell more than 400 million units by July 1. A Microsoft spokesperson later reached out to me to clarify that statement, noting that the 400 million figure was from a previous IDC prediction of PC sales through July 1 (for a full year, from July through July). “Per our usual policy, we aren’t making any predictions on adoption for Windows 8 before it hits the market,” the spokesperson added.

Discuss this Article 4

paulusar (not verified)
on Oct 11, 2012
Sales of Desktops and laptops will keep dropping. Who will want a new PC with Vista 2, oops Windows 8 on it? The iSuckers will keep buying iPads. What a fiasco! Reminds me of new coke.
dklippi
on Oct 11, 2012
I only use what the crappy IT dept at work gives me anyway. Why does it take a week to get a network share? And they wonder why everyone uses cloud services.
the_tech_mule (not verified)
on Oct 11, 2012
I figured that sales would go up this quarter since people could still by computers with Windows 7 on it. I don't know of a single person or business that has waited to purchase computers because of Windows 8. Tablets maybe, but not desktops laptops.
McGilli
on Oct 11, 2012
I credit Apple with all of the past years "media events" from various companies announcing their new tablets, devices and phones. Companies are really turning to the hype when it comes to their new portable products. And I believe this is having a huge effect on the PC market. People are getting hyped up about all these new devices that can basically do everything a PC can, but they are smaller and "cooler". I think the rise of these media events then takes away future PC purchase money and puts that money directly into A Galaxy, iPhone, iPad etc etc. Now that being said - yes - there are those that are now holding off on PC's for Win8 devices, but many of those are also portable phones and tablets. And what about all these Hybrids from Asus etc - are they classified as PC or are they tablet? or both? PAUL - with Win8 hybrids - will you count their numbers with PC totals sold, AND tablet totals sold by companies? Or can you only count them as one device in one category? Or will their now be a NEW category. PC's, tablets, phones, hybrids etc?

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