Laptops outsell desktops shocker

Surprise, surprise...

By Michael Singer, 6 June 2005 09:20

NEWS More laptops than desktops were sold in the US in May, according to a report released on Friday - a milestone in PC sales history.

Analysts with research firm Current Analysis said laptop sales jumped to 53.3 per cent of the total PC retail market in May 2005. Last year, laptops made up 45.9 per cent of the total PC retail market.

Occasionally, laptops have outsold desktops but those moments happen during a one-week period and are usually the result of extremely heavy promotions, Current Analysis said. May marks the first time laptops have outsold desktops over the course of a full month, the firm said.

For example, the only time laptops even came close to surpassing desktops was back in August 2004 when Toshiba launched an aggressive back-to-school advertising campaign. The resulting sales pushed laptop sales to 49.6 per cent of the market.

Sam Bhavnani, a senior analyst with Current Analysis, offers three reasons for the increase in sales.

"The past few months have seen an increase in the number of retail notebook players, with lesser-known value players Acer and Medion gaining shelf space at major retailers such as Best Buy, Circuit City and CompUSA. In addition, notebook pricing has dropped considerably, almost 17 per cent between May 2004 and May 2005 ($1,370 to $1,131), while desktop [prices] dropped only four per cent in the same time frame ($728 to $696)."

Bhavnani also noted that Wi-Fi is no longer considered a luxury but a necessity.

"One year ago, over 20 per cent of retail notebooks did not include wireless. Today, that number is less than five per cent," he said. "While Centrino laptops were frequently advertised in the $1,399 range last year, it is now common to see sub-$900 Centrino models in flyers."

The upward trend in laptop sales has prompted other analysts to adjust their expectations. Financial analyst firm JP Morgan bumped up its PC unit sales growth forecast for 2005 to 10.1 per cent from 8.8 per cent based on sales results in April.

Late last month, Gartner revised its forecast for the rest of the year. The analyst firm now expects PC shipments worldwide in 2005 to exceed 202 million units, up 10.2 per cent from the previous year.

Michael Singer writes for CNET News.com

Comments

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  1. 1. Joe Whitehead

    I'm typing this on a laptop.

    Another big reason people want laptops is that now the only software that doesn't work so well on a cheap laptop is gaming programs. My 1200 MHz Pentium III may seem slow but it's actually very fast for homework and video playing. The only thing besides gaming that most people would be annoyed with on mine is encoding video files. Decoding is great though. Another issue is that the 640 MB of RAM I have is not that uncommon anymore for a cheap aftermarket addon. It used to be unheard of to upgrade laptops. Now I can go get a (still expensive but not insanely inflated to increase new unit sales) 512 MB module for less then $200 and it's probally going to max out the RAM of my unit too!

    The best part is that you can get a docking station for less then the rediculous thousands of credits they used to cost. The laptops are actually more expensive then docking stations which means they're both finally getting reasonable.

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