FRAMINGHAM, MA - Despite strong growth in the fourth quarter and the rest of 2004, delayed recovery in Japan
and a cautious outlook in the U.S. have led to slightly lower
expectations for worldwide PC shipments in 2005.
Research firm IDC today lowered its
forecast for total worldwide PC
shipments for 2005 to 9.7%, from 10.1% in November. The good news:
Demand is likely to shift into later years and the growth forecast
remains
above 8% through the end of 2009.
Total shipments are expected to reach 195.4 million in 2005 on growth of 9.7% with total shipment value growing by 5.3% to $209 billion, IDC said. Shipments are projected to reach 273 million in 2009 with a value of $245 billion.
"Despite fears of slowing growth, particularly in the U.S. consumer segment, the PC market was fairly robust in the fourth quarter of 2004 with strong demand in the consumer and business segments," said Loren Loverde, director of IDC's worldwide quarterly PC tracker. "While overall growth in 2005 will be slower than 2004, we expect to see continued strength in portables and in emerging markets. Although worldwide growth will slip into single-digits this year, long-term drivers such as mobile adoption, replacement of older systems, and growing penetration will support healthy growth through the end of the decade."
"While IT buyers in the United States have
indicated
firm intentions to buy in 2005, we have kept the U.S. forecast modest
because
of what we see as a host of risk factors," added Roger Kay, vice
president of client computing at IDC. "These factors include a recovery
that appears to
be getting long in the tooth, a lack of jobs growth, rising budget and
trade
deficits, persistently high oil prices, a treasury-draining foreign
war, rising
interest rates, a stock market that continues to move sideways, and
record-low
household savings rates."
Following a second year of nearly 11% growth, the U.S. market is
expected to slow to 7.6% growth in 2005. Consumer growth may fall to low single
digits in the first quarter of 2005 but full-year growth should top 7%.
Business growth will lead the market while the public sector is expected to
trail other segments.
Adoption
of portable PCs continues to fuel growth in Western Europe.
Growth in portable PC shipments should top 20% in 2005 following over 30%
growth in 2004 and nearly 40% in 2003. The consumer segment remains a key
driver with portable shipments growth of more than 40% outpacing the commercial
segment by roughly 5 points. Growth of desktop PC shipments is expected to slow
to low single-digits from nearly 10% in 2004.
In Japan,
the business segment continues to lead the market, although relatively strong
growth of 12% in 2004 is expected to fall below 5% in 2005. Unfortunately, the
consumer and public sectors have not recovered, and growth in these segments is
expected to be roughly flat in 2005.
For the
rest of the Asia-Pacific market, growth is expected to slow from over 16% in
2004, but remain in double-digits despite the Indian Ocean Tsunami and efforts
to control China's
economy. Public sector growth is expected to outpace growth in business
segments by the end of the year, while consumer growth will slip into
single-digits.