The Wall Street Journal is reporting that while Windows 7 operating system has
fattened the company's earnings and boosted personal-computer sales at
retailers like Best Buy. But it hasn't increased the profits of PC giants
Hewlett-Packard and Dell.
Consumers purchased more than 90 million new PCs during
the holiday quarter, when Microsoft released Windows 7, up 22% from a year
earlier, PC revenue grew at just a single-digit rate, the Journal reports. Laptop prices posted a record year-over-year drop,
falling 23 per cent to an average of $581 last quarter from a year ago.
Dell Vice President Alex Gruzen said in October, the PC
market would no longer be a "race to the bottom" in terms of prices
but it is turning out that once Windows was released tight-fisted consumers
meant retailers flogged PCs at deep discounts over the holiday quarter. Dell, which tried to resist cutting its prices, has
already seen slower sales growth as low-cost competitor Acer has stepped up.
Prices are likely to continue to go lower Acer told the
Journal. HP has been leaning on suppliers to drop prices so that
it can keep final prices low. Meanwhile
Microsoft is coining it in. Last week it
reported a 60 per cent jump in quarterly earnings, largely because of Windows 7
sales. Intel, which supplies chips to PC
makers, last month reported a 28 per cent jump in revenue and a tenfold
increase in profit from a year earlier thanks to strong chip sales. Best Buy also did well.
The problem appears to be that Windows 7 is probably only
a consumer product at the moment and that is a market that wants cheap PCs
still.