Apple the top pick in growing PC market, analyst says

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in General Discussion
Apple will continue to benefit from continued momentum in the PC market, a growth trend that investment bank Cowen says will be sustained into 2021.

Credit: Andrew O'Hara, AppleInsider
Credit: Andrew O'Hara, AppleInsider


In a note to investors seen by AppleInsider, lead analyst Krish Sankar updated his PC unit forecasts to grow another 2% year-over-year in 2021. That's on top of the previous unit growth in 2020 of about 8.3%.

PC shipments grew an estimated 9% in the fourth quarter of 2020. Sankar said he expects that momentum to continue into 2021, with shipment growth of about 2.5% during the year. The key beneficiaries will be Apple, Silicon Motion Technology Co., and Western Digital, Sankar wrote.

That forecast is consistent with Cowen supply chain checks that indicate notebook PC builds are already growing in the low single digits in early 2021. Server shipments are also expected to continue growing into 2021, with an acceleration of growth of up to 5% on the table.

In the IT hardware space, Apple remains Sankar's top pick because of the growth and recent iPad and M1-equipped Mac releases. The switch to Apple Silicon, the analyst added, is likely to alleviate some CPU procurement issues.

For other PC makers, like Dell and HP, a recovery in the enterprise market is going to be critical to revenue growth. An end to the current work-from-home environment will likely lead to a recovery in demand for servers, storage systems, and printing devices, Sankar said.

There are some potential risks to the PC market, the analyst notes. That could be a confusion as to whether an uptick in gaming PCs during the holiday season was caused by strong gaming computer demand or an increase in the number of users looking to mine cryptocurrency.

Similarly, commodity costs could be a potential source of cost inflation for the PC market in the second quarter of 2021. Supply of key components, like memory configurations, could become constrained by a rise in demand. Server market memory transitions and 5G smartphone shipments could also tighten supply.
balu

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 6
    mobirdmobird Posts: 753member
    What brand is that coffee cup?
    balujcs2305
  • Reply 2 of 6
    normmnormm Posts: 653member
    mobird said:
    What brand is that coffee cup?
    Perhaps HMM?
  • Reply 3 of 6
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    I give the PC as we know it five years.
  • Reply 4 of 6
    MacPro said:
    I give the PC as we know it five years.
    I remember when similar predictions were made for gaming PCs when consoles started becoming big sellers.  Then Steam happened.

    I don't entirely disagree with you, but I think 5 years might be a little soon. 
  • Reply 5 of 6
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    MacPro said:
    I give the PC as we know it five years.
    I remember when similar predictions were made for gaming PCs when consoles started becoming big sellers.  Then Steam happened.

    I don't entirely disagree with you, but I think 5 years might be a little soon. 
    My logic is that RISC will soon dominate CISC and the big game programming companies such as  Valve must be thinking about ARM compilations right about now.  You have Nvidia sniffing around ARM itself and AMD buying an Apple M1 spin-off team so the writing is on the wall IMHO.  The discrete GPU may be in danger given the performance Apple is showing is possible.  Apple's second and third phase M SoCs could blow our socks off for high-end graphics!  On a side note, Apple could also have a server SoC up its sleeve, imagine the heat saving!
    beowulfschmidt
  • Reply 6 of 6
    MacPro said:
    MacPro said:
    I give the PC as we know it five years.
    I remember when similar predictions were made for gaming PCs when consoles started becoming big sellers.  Then Steam happened.

    I don't entirely disagree with you, but I think 5 years might be a little soon. 
    My logic is that RISC will soon dominate CISC and the big game programming companies such as  Valve must be thinking about ARM compilations right about now.  You have Nvidia sniffing around ARM itself and AMD buying an Apple M1 spin-off team so the writing is on the wall IMHO.  The discrete GPU may be in danger given the performance Apple is showing is possible.  Apple's second and third phase M SoCs could blow our socks off for high-end graphics!  On a side note, Apple could also have a server SoC up its sleeve, imagine the heat saving!
    "PC as we know it" might technically be accurate, but if PCs move to RISC and/or ARM, I don't think most people will either notice or care. :smile: 

    As long as performance exceeds current tech, or at the very least matches, nobody will care what kind of chip makes their games, or other software, go fast.
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