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IBM Said to Be Leaving the PC Business
IBM to Sell PC Business to Chinese Company
Sean Michael Kerner

The company that has been synonymous with the term "PC" since it was first created is getting out of the PC business.

According to a report in the New York Times, IBM is in talks with China's largest maker of personal computers which currently operates under the name Lenovo. The company, which trades on the Hong Kong stock exchange, previously was known as Legend. Lenovo, according to the Times report, is no stranger to doing business with IBM and has been an IBM distributor since 1984.

The Times cited unnamed sources for its report.

In January 2003, IBM began its retreat from the PC market by outsourcing manufacturing to Sanmina-SCI. At that time internetnews.com reported that, as a result of that deal (and one with Solectron), more than two-thirds of IBM's Intel-based product manufacturing has been outsourced.

IBM's share of the market it created back in 1981 has steadily dwindled over the years. In a recent Gartner research report on PC sales, IBM was reported to hold only 5.6 percent of the market, placing it a distant third behind Dell at 16.8 percent and HP at 15 percent. Out of IBM's annual revenue of $92 billion, the PC business represents approximately 12 percent.

Gartner's recent "Predicts 2005: PC Technologies Due for Transition" reports three of the Top 10 PC vendors wouldn't be around to celebrate the holidays in 2007 because of reduced profits and growth. The research firm noted reduced growth rates and profit margins as the drivers towards greater PC vendor consolidation. Gartner has forecast that PC unit growth will be halved from its 2003 to 2005 growth rate of 11.3 percent for 2006 to 2008 down to 5.7 percent.

News courtesy of internetnews.com

December 3, 2004


Contents:
1. IBM to Sell PC Business to Chinese Company






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