Chinese industry | From Guard Shack to Global Giant; How did Lenovo become the world’s biggest computer company?
Jan 12th 2013
http://www.economist.com/news/bu ... -shack-global-giant
Quote:
Once again Lenovo's ThinkPad, or corporate PC, came back to life ("shipments have doubled since the deal, and operating margins are thought to be above 5%"), reconsituting "its [Lenovo's] two huge profit centres—corporate PC sales and the China market."
"In most markets outside China, Lenovo’s mobile phones, tablets and consumer PCs (as opposed to corporate sales of ThinkPads) lose money * * * [currently] its pretax profit margin of 2%.
"The firm is strikingly unChinese in some ways. English is the official language. Many senior executives are foreign. Top brass and important meetings rotate between two headquarters, in Beijing and Morrisville, North Carolina (where IBM’s PC division was based), and Lenovo’s research hub in Japan. Only after giving two foreigners a try did Mr Liu push for a Chinese chief executive: his protégé Mr Yang. Mr Yang, who spoke little English at the time of the IBM deal, moved his family to North Carolina to immerse himself in American ways.
"Still, the firm has some way to go. It is far too reliant on one market, China. Global investors will not tolerate its meagre profits for ever; some are already grousing. * * * Lenovo has managed to get to the top of the PC mountain at precisely the moment when the mountain appears to be crumbling. Industry sales are shrinking as PCs are made obsolete by other devices. HP has even mooted quitting the business altogether. Some say Lenovo’s costly global expansion will end in tears. Mr Yang disagrees. Indeed, he shows an unfashionable faith in PCs, which are still 85% of Lenovo’s revenues.
"He also thinks Lenovo has a secret weapon. It has kept a lot of manufacturing in-house (why outsource to Foxconn when you already pay Chinese wages?). Mr Yang believes this in-house expertise gives his firm an edge in product development.
Note: Press releases:
(1) Soft PC Shipments in Fourth Quarter Lead to Annual Decline as HP Holds Onto Top Spot, According to IDC. IDC, Jan 10, 2013
http://www.idc.com/getdoc.jsp?containerId=prUS23903013
(4Q12: HP 15,023,000 vs Lenovo 14,105,000)
(2) Gartner Says Declining Worldwide PC Shipments in Fourth Quarter of 2012 Signal Structural Shift of PC Market; Global PC Shipments Declined 4.9 Percent in Fourth Quarter. Gartner, Jan 14, 2013
https://www.gartner.com/it/page.jsp?id=2301715
(4Q12: HP 14,645,041 vs 13,976,668)
(3) In October, Gartner but not IDC said Lenovo beat HP in 3Q12, by a hair.
Gartner Says Worldwide PC Shipments Declined 8 Percent in Third Quarter of 2012 as the Market Prepares for the Launch of Windows 8; Lenovo Takes Slight Lead Over HP for No. 1 Global Position. Gartner, Oct 10, 2012
http://www.gartner.com/it/page.jsp?id=2194017
(3Q12: Lenovo 13,767,976 vs HP 13,550,761)
(to be continued) |