Canalys: Tablets drive 19% Q4 growth in global PC market; Apple takes No. 3 spot from Dell

Tablets

Led by tremendous continued demand for Apple’s iPad, tablet sales helped drive impressive 19% fourth-quarter growth in the global PC market according to research firm Canalys. Strong Mac and iPad sales resulted in 241% growth year-over-year for the Cupertino-based company, which passed Dell this quarter to become the third-largest PC vender in the world. Shipments jumped from 3.4 million to 11.5 million units, and Apple now owns 10.8% of the global PC market. Ahead of Apple is Acer, which saw 8.8% growth year-over-year in the fourth quarter. The company shipped 13.6 million PCs amounting to 12.8% of the global market. Atop the list with 17.7% of the market is HP, which shipped 18.7 million computers in the fourth quarter. Year-over-year growth slowed to 2.9%, however, while companies like Dell and Lenovo showed double-digit growth. HP plans to enter the tablet market in the first half of this year, and it is expected to announce its first tablet devices at a press event next month.

As to whether or not tablets like the Apple iPad should be included in PC sales figures, Canalys Senior Analyst Daryl Chiam addresses the question quite well: “Any argument that a pad is not a PC is simply out of sync,” Chiam said in a statement. “With screen sizes of seven inches or above, ample processing power, and a growing number of applications, pads offer a computing experience comparable to netbooks. They compete for the same customers and will happily coexist. As with smart phones, some users will require a physical keyboard, while others will do without.” Hit the break for Canalys’ full release.

Canalys reports global PC market growth of 19% in Q4 2010
- Apple climbs to third place worldwide

Palo Alto, Singapore and Reading (UK) – Wednesday, 26 January 2011

Canalys today announced strong PC industry growth of 19% in Q4 2010, with Apple climbing to third place in the market, thanks to impressive iPad and Mac sales, as well as fast growth in Asia Pacific. The analyst company attributes the majority of Q4 market growth to the rising demand for pads, a new product category.

‘Pads gave consumers increased product choice over the holiday season,’ said Canalys Analyst Tim Coulling. ‘While they do not appeal to first-time buyers or low-income households, they are proving extremely popular as additional computing devices.’

Canalys urges vendors to accept new market realities, by recognizing pads as an integral new component of the overall PC landscape. Unlike other analyst companies, Canalys incorporates pad shipments, such as the Samsung Galaxy Tab and Apple’s iPad, in its total PC market report.

‘Pads gave the market momentum in 2010, just as netbooks did the year before,’ said Canalys Senior Analyst Daryl Chiam. ‘We are encouraging vendors to plan for the future and not to remain stuck in the past.’

‘Any argument that a pad is not a PC is simply out of sync,’ said Chiam. ‘With screen sizes of seven inches or above, ample processing power, and a growing number of applications, pads offer a computing experience comparable to netbooks. They compete for the same customers and will happily coexist. As with smart phones, some users will require a physical keyboard, while others will do without.’

‘Each new product category typically causes a significant shift in market shares,’ said Chiam. ‘Apple is benefiting from pads, just as Acer, Samsung and Asus previously did with netbooks. The PC industry has always evolved this way, starting when Toshiba and Compaq rode high on the original notebook wave.’

At a regional level, Asia, especially China and India, continued to outperform most of the other global markets, to the benefit of Lenovo and Dell. In the United States, sales recovered somewhat, while Europe, the Middle East and Africa remained an ongoing concern due to substantial consumer inventory build-up. Moving forward, inventory issues will be exacerbated by rising VAT levels across five countries – Poland, Latvia, Slovakia, Switzerland and the UK – as well as the urgency created by the upcoming Intel refresh. As a result, Canalys predicts significant retail discounting in this region during the first quarter.

Other bright spots for the PC industry included accelerating corporate refresh programmes, as Windows 7 became an accepted operating system. This trend favoured vendors with a solid presence in B2B, notably HP, Dell and Lenovo. Canalys also noted strong demand for servers and storage, driven by substantial investment in data centre infrastructure.

‘Recessionary budgets are over for most companies, and IT expenditure is again being used as a catalyst for growth,’ said Coulling. ‘The performance of the corporate market, however, contrasts starkly with the decline in public sector expenditure in most Western countries. The big service-led companies, which profited greatly from huge government-led contracts, are in for a tough 2011.’

10 Comments
  • http://twitter.com/BrowncoatRick Browncoat Rick

    By the time the rest of the market figures out how to outdo the iPad, Apple will have the market cornered. Oh, wait…

  • Anonymous

    I dunno if I would consider the iPad a PC with functions similiar to a netbook… a Netbook, is a smaller, generally lower powered version of a laptop… an iPad is an oversized iPod. So according to this “analyst”, iOS on a bigger screen is comparable to a PC operating system? I don’t think so… at least not in its current state.

  • Anonymous

    Utterly predictable that BGR would jump on the “tablet is a PC” bandwagon so quickly. Even Engadget seemed pretty skeptical about the concept. I’m sure BGR would be just as vocal about it if an Android tablet was the current market leader, and was enhancing Dell’s sales and market share figures.

  • Anonymous

    If you start to include the iPad, you have to start seriously considering the iPod Touch and smartphones in these numbers. And the fact that you really need a computer to sync an iPad really places it in another place that is not entirely in line with the PC market. The lines are pretty blurry here.

  • Mascar1617

    iPod touch with bigger screen=PC? I dont think so. Lets be reasonable BGR. Lay off the Apple kool aid momentarily.

  • Anonymous

    The iPad is not a computer, sorry. It runs a mobile OS. While the lines are blurring, it just isn’t the same. Since the iPad uses nearly the exact same OS as the iPhone, shouldn’t we then count iPhone’s as part of the total? I mean they even have the same processor and a high resolution “Retina” display. While we are at it, let’s include Android in that total. Heck, let’s throw in Google TV too. While we are at it, we can throw in ATMs and slot machines.

  • Anonymous

    What kind of bullshit is this? A stand-alone, notebook computer or Tablet PC behaves in a whole different way to an iPad. If you’re calling an iPad a PC then I demand we count iPods, iPhones, Android phones, WinPho 7 phones and Palm phones. Oh whilst we’re at it throw in Blackberrys too.

    Edit to add: Had this waiting to post for ages, then when I posted it loads of other people had said the same already : )

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WiQmQhA-OrM Walter Sobchak

    Where is thenewreign? “241% growth oh oh oh I’m splooging in my knickers! Nothing makes me hotter than hearing positive, fiscal, apple news”

    • Anonymous

      Where

  • http://www.glenhoperidge.com.au iBernie

    It doesn’t matter what any fanboi or Apple hater thinks. It doesn’t matter if it is counted as a PC or not. What matters to stock holders is that Apple is selling heaps and is making (and is worth) more money than ANY other tech company and certainly more than any other hardware companies period.

    The category isn’t that important. The money is.

    It’s not personal, it’s just business.

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