Research and consulting firm Gartner cited economic uncertainty as the reason behind a drop in worldwide PC shipments in the fourth quarter of 2022 and the year overall.
Shipments fell 28.5% in Q4 2022 compared with Q4 2021 and 16.2% for the year, Gartner reported in preliminary results. There were 65.3 million units shipped in Q4, the “largest quarterly shipment decline since Gartner began tracking the PC market in the mid-1990s.”
There were 286.2 million units shipped in 2022, which also marked “the worst annual shipment decline in Gartner’s PC tracking history.”
Mikako Kitagawa, director analyst at Gartner, said the anticipation of a global recession along with increased inflation and higher interest rates are behind the low numbers, coupled with a bottleneck as inventory stacks up again.
“Since many consumers already have relatively new PCs that were purchased during the pandemic, a lack of affordability is superseding any motivation to buy, causing consumer PC demand to drop to its lowest level in years,” Kitagawa added.
The enterprise PC market is also feeling the crunch of a slowing economy, Kitagawa said. Business demand began its decline in the third quarter of 2022, “but the market has now shifted from softness to deterioration.”
“Enterprise buyers are extending PC lifecycles and delaying purchases, meaning the business market will likely not return to growth until 2024,” Kitagawa noted.
Numbers by vendor
Lenovo, HP and Dell kept their top three spots in the fourth quarter, shipping 15.7 million units, 13.2 million units and 10.9 million units, respectively. Compared with Q4 2021, the three saw declines of 28.6%, 29.1% and 37.0%.
In terms of market share from Q4 2021 to Q4 2022, Lenovo maintained its 24%, HP went from 20.4% to 20.2%, and Dell’s share dropped from 18.9% to 16.7%.
Other top vendors, in order of number of units shipped, were Apple, ASUS and Acer. These companies also saw declines in shipments.
Shipments by region
Despite maintaining its market share, Lenovo still experienced its sharpest decline since Gartner began tracking the PC market, the report said, with shipments dropping in all regions except in Japan. HP and Dell also experienced historically steep declines.
In the U.S., the PC market dropped 20.5% in Q4 2022, marking its sixth straight quarter of decline, with both consumer and business PC spending slowing.
“Even as vendors offered deep PC discounts during the holiday season in an attempt to lower inventory, consumers were not swayed to spare their money,” Kitagawa commented.
HP beat out Dell for the top Q4 vendor shipment spot in the U.S. with 4.6 million units shipped and a 26.8% market share. Dell shipped 4.0 million units and captured 23.4% of the market share. Those figures mark U.S. shipment declines of 14.8% for HP and 32.4% for Dell, compared with Q4 2021.
Taking a global outlook, the European, Middle Eastern and African markets had a “historical” decline of 37.2% year over year, “due to the intersection of political unrest, inflationary pressures, interest rate increases and a pending recession,” the report noted. The Asia-Pacific market, excluding Japan, declined 29.4% year over year, due to reduced demand in China.
“The PC industry experienced very unusual ups and downs over the past 11 years,” Kitagawa concluded. “After the extraordinary growth period between 2020 and 2021 due to the pandemic, the market has clearly begun a downward trend which will continue until the beginning of 2024.”
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