The PC industry suffered a precipitous drop in shipments in the second quarter of 2022, according to IDC(opens in new tab) and Gartner(opens in new tab) analysis. While on its face that doesn't bode well, it's important to remember the industry experienced a boom during the pandemic and these declines can be interpreted as a return to normality.
Research firms IDC and Gartner both released estimates of worldwide second quarter PC shipments (via Market Watch(opens in new tab)). IDC claimed the 15.3% fall in sales to 71.3 million was the worst quarterly drop since it began tracking the market in the mid 1990s. Gartner's figure was slightly better, claiming a 12.6% drop to 72 million units.
Whatever the precise amount, a dip in the PC market isn't surprising. According to IDC, its 71.3 million Q2 sales figure isn't far below the initial pandemic level of 74.3 million from Q2 2020 and still well above the 62.1 million and 65.1 million estimated sales from Q2 of 2018 and 2019 respectively. So, while the headline drop might look bad, the PC market remains in a strong state.
Gaming continues to be a large contributor to the market overall. Research by Ampere Analysis(opens in new tab) suggests the PC Gaming content and services market is set to fall from $35.3 billion to $34.2 billion, which is a much lower decrease than the drop in the overall PC hardware market. Despite macroeconomic challenges, gamers continue spending money. Ampere attributes the drop to pandemic-forced closures of gaming cafes in Asia.
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