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- <text id=93TT2071>
- <title>
- Aug. 02, 1993: Crashing Prices
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 02, 1993 Big Shots:America's Kids and Their Guns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINES, Page 48
- Crashing Prices
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Falling demand and deep discounting lead to vanishing profits
- and heavy casualties in PCs
- </p>
- <p>By THOMAS MCCARROLL
- </p>
- <p> It is the best of times in the personal-computer market. Prices
- are in free fall. Options that were once prohibitively expensive
- are now packaged at rock-bottom prices. The fastest chips and
- the biggest hard drives are cheap and plentiful. For consumers
- who have often had to wait years to buy the latest, most powerful
- machines at affordable prices, the market has entered what seems
- to be a golden age.
- </p>
- <p> It is also the worst of times. For most of the companies that
- make those computers, that market has suddenly become a lethal
- place. Once successful companies such as IBM, Compaq, Dell and
- Apple are floundering; profits are plunging, margins squeezed.
- Last month one of the personal-computer industry's leading lights--the pioneering Tandy Corp.--became a prominent casualty.
- Faced with $52 million in losses in the past year and an even
- bloodier future, Tandy decided to abandon the PC business, which
- accounted for 10% of its sales last year. The company simply
- could not survive the intense price competition.
- </p>
- <p> Tandy has been swept up in the personal-computer industry's
- most savage shake-out ever. Squeezed by falling demand on one
- hand and a destructive price war on the other, PC makers are
- realizing their worst nightmare: their once exotic, high-technology
- products have become little more than cheap, interchangeable
- commodities. Since the PCs all use basically identical hardware,
- consumers are no longer picky about what brand of computer they
- buy so long as the price is right. The result: retail prices
- are falling an average of 8% every three months. A fully loaded
- IBM PS/1 computer with the latest hardware typically sells for
- $1,699, for instance, in contrast to $1,999 for a similar model
- two years ago. That is in part because one can order a computer
- in every way comparable to the PS/1 from a mail-order discounter
- like Gateway and pay up to $1,000 less than IBM is asking. Consumers
- love it; the industry is in full panic. "This is no longer a
- business for the faint of heart," says James Cannavino, head
- of IBM's personal-systems division, "and if you think things
- are tough now, there are no rest periods ahead."
- </p>
- <p> So far this year the price war has claimed as many as two dozen
- firms, including CompuAdd Computer, a big mail-order firm based
- in Austin, Texas, that filed for bankruptcy in June, and Everex
- Systems Inc., a PC manufacturer located in Fremont, California.
- It has also left many others gravely wounded. Dell Computer
- is expected to report losses of $68 million this week, its first
- quarterly deficit ever. Ironically, Dell, which built a $2 billion-a-year
- business by sell ing cheap, reliable computers by mail, is
- being done in by copycat mail-order firms offering bigger discounts.
- </p>
- <p> Even Apple Computer, whose wildly popular Macintosh computer--and proprietary software that pretty much prevented competitors
- from producing clones--made the company recession-proof in
- the past, has been badly bruised. Apple, which surprised Wall
- Street a week ago by reporting a larger than expected quarterly
- deficit of $188.3 million, has been losing its edge to software
- systems like Microsoft's Windows, which endow practically any
- PC with easy-to-use, Mac-like features. In a desperate bid to
- halt defections, Apple this month cut prices on 23 models of
- computers as much as 34%.
- </p>
- <p> But Apple's--and the industry's--woes are just beginning.
- By the time the dust settles, analysts predict that fewer than
- 100 of the 350 PC makers in business today will be left standing.
- Says Richard Shaffer, editor of the Computer Letter: "What's
- going to happen to the personal-computer industry in the next
- few years won't be a pretty sight."
- </p>
- <p> The primary instigators of the price war have been new small
- companies that function more as assembly lines than as manufacturers.
- Many of these firms, such as Zeos, Graystar and PC Brand, don't
- invest in costly research or development, nor do they own expensive
- manufacturing plants. Instead they operate out of factories
- and garages. Rather than make PCs from scratch, they buy everything
- from circuit boards, displays and disk drives to entire computers
- from foreign firms that largely copy American PC designs. Says
- Brad Smith, vice president of PC research at Dataquest: "All
- you need to start a PC company today is a fax machine to take
- orders and a Black & Decker screwdriver to assemble the parts."
- </p>
- <p> The price war, though, is only a symptom of more fundamental
- transformation taking place in the industry, not all of which
- will be to the advantage of the U.S. As the PC has changed from
- a magic black box to a run-of-the-mill commodity like a television
- set or a radio, so has the economics of the business. Since
- there is no mystery to the technology, PCs can be manufactured
- as well as priced like any other commodity. That fact has helped
- make computers a more global business, but it has also played
- into the hands of copycat, low-cost producers: up to 75% of
- the internal components are imported.
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, the price war may have strengthened U.S. computer
- leadership in some key markets. American firms, which feared
- a takeover by Japanese firms during the 1980s, have exported
- their cutthroat pricing to Tokyo with stunning success. Led
- by IBM, Dell and Compaq, U.S. companies sent shock waves through
- the Japanese PC establishment by trimming prices up to 30%.
- While Japanese domestic manufacturers, such as Fujitsu and NEC,
- have responded with deep discounts of their own, they have been
- unable to shake off the Americans, much to the delight of Japanese
- consumers.
- </p>
- <p> Still, more victims than victors are expected as falling prices
- and changing economics force many U.S. PC makers to re-evaluate
- the market. To compete in the future, say analysts, PC makers
- must bring unique products to market in order to stand out from
- the pack. As a result, many companies are placing big bets on
- such emerging technologies as pen-based computing, hand-held
- PCs and multimedia. Says John McCarthy, director of technology
- at Forrester Research: "If you're just a boxmaker, with nothing
- else to offer, your days may be numbered."
- </p>
- <p> IBM's strategy is both to outpace the competition with unique
- products such as the ThinkPad notebook PC, and to beat them
- at their game of discounting. The company has filled practically
- every market channel with a new line of PCs, including models
- aimed at homes and small businesses. Next month Big Blue will
- introduce a bargain-basement line called Ambra that will not
- carry the IBM logo. The overall strategy has apparently worked.
- After losing $2 billion in the past two years, IBM's PC business
- is expected to report a small profit this week. "We're here
- to stay," says Cannavino. "When the music stops again, and there's
- one less chair, we intend to have a seat."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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