Data Pubblicazione:

Vendite PC nel 2012: calo del 3,7% su base annua

Vendite PC nel 2012: calo del 3,7% su base annua Nonostante gli sforzi del settore intensi per superare l'inerzia del mercato, 2012 comunque conclusa con una nota acida con volume globale della spedizione PC calo del 3,7% su base annua. Con limitata trazione iniziale da Windows 8 nella stagione delle vacanze, e la pressione continua di compresse, IDC prevede ora 2.013 vendite di PC in calo del 1,3% nel 2013, secondo l'International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly PC Tracker. Vendite natalizie deludenti, un malessere scadente reception per Windows 8, e continuando economica che un ulteriore crimpati budget IT ha segnato il volto del mercato nella seconda metà del 2012, portando a un anno-su-anno calo del 8,3% delle consegne del quarto trimestre, il calo più consistente registrato per un quarto vacanza. Inoltre, emerge un potenziale di crescita del mercato è in calo e venire più vicino a quello delle regioni mature. 2012 ha segnato il primo anno in cui i mercati emergenti hanno visto un calo dei volumi, mentre il 2013 e tornare a crescere, si prevede a meno dell'1% e con modesta, crescita a una cifra fino al 2017. Per le regioni mature, 2013 segnerà il terzo anno consecutivo di calo dei volumi. IDC continua a prevedere una crescita contenuta nel 2014 e nel 2015 con la contrazione del volume negli anni successivi.

FONTE IDC., 4 marzo 2013

Nonostante gli sforzi del settore intensi per superare l'inerzia del mercato, il 2012 si è concluso per i PC con un calo del 3,7% su base annua.

Con limitata trazione iniziale da Windows 8 nella stagione delle vacanze IDC prevede per il 2013 delle vendite di PC in calo ancora del 1,3% nel 2013 (International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly PC Tracker).

Anche se l'industria dei PC ha puntato su Windows 8 e un'offerta più varia e meno costosa di notebook ultrasottili per rilanciare la domanda, gli sforzi finora sono stati deludenti.


FRAMINGHAM, Mass., March 4, 2013 – Despite intense industry efforts to overcome market inertia, 2012 nonetheless ended on a sour note with global PC shipment volume shrinking 3.7% on the year. With limited initial traction from Windows 8 in the holiday season, and continued pressure from tablets, IDC now expects 2013 PC shipments to decline by 1.3% in 2013, according to the International Data Corporation (IDCWorldwide Quarterly PC Tracker.

Disappointing holiday sales, an underwhelming reception to Windows 8, and continuing economic malaise that further crimped IT budgets marked the face of the market during the second half of 2012, leading to a year-on-year decline of 8.3% in fourth quarter shipments, the most substantial decline recorded for a holiday quarter.

Furthermore, emerging market growth potential is declining and coming closer to that of mature regions. 2012 marked the first year that emerging markets have seen a volume decline, and while 2013 will return to growth, it is projected at less than 1% and with modest, single-digit growth through 2017. For mature regions, 2013 will mark the third consecutive year of volume declines. IDC continues to expect limited growth in 2014 and 2015 with contracting volume in later years.

Although the PC industry had banked on Windows 8 and a more varied and less expensive offering of ultrathin notebooks to revive demand, efforts thus far have been disappointing. A lack of touchscreen components has contributed to a limited supply of touch-enabled Windows 8 models – being out of step with the touch focus of Windows 8, and appearing relatively expensive compared to other options.

"The PC market is still looking for updated models to gain traction and demonstrate sufficient appeal to drive growth in a very competitive market," said Loren Loverde, Program Vice President, Worldwide PC Trackers at IDC. "Growth in emerging regions has slowed considerably, and we continue to see constrained PC demand as buyers favor other devices for their mobility and convenience features. We still don't see tablets (with limited local storage, file system, lesser focus on traditional productivity, etc.) as functional competitors to PCs – but they are winning consumer dollars with mobility and consumer appeal nevertheless."

"The U.S. PC market struggled in 2012, culminating with a 6.5% year-on-year decrease in the fourth quarter and -7.6% growth for the full year. Market saturation, a tough economic environment and weakness across the board, and lack of momentum for Windows 8, which led to 2012 contraction, are expected to persist at least during the first half of 2013," said Rajani Singh, Research Analyst at IDC. "IDC expects the second half of 2013 to regain some marginal momentum partly as a rubber band effect from 2012, and largely thanks to the outcome of industry restructuring, better channel involvement, and potentially greater acceptance of Windows 8. We also anticipate a new refresh cycle momentum in the commercial segment driven by the end of Window XP life support."