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A Lenovo Yoga Book 9i dual-screen laptop on display at the Microsoft booth during the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, on January 6, 2023. Photo: AFP

Lenovo profit misses as global PC downturn deepens, but Chinese-owned firm retains top spot in market over HP

  • Beijing-based company says net income fell 66 per cent to US$176.5 million, missing the average analyst estimate of US$235 million
  • Lenovo fended off HP to retain the top spot in the global PC market even though shipments shrank by 18.4 per cent, according to IDC

Beijing-based Lenovo Group’s profit missed estimates for a second straight quarter after the global PC market slid deeper into a demand slump.

The world’s biggest PC maker reported net income fell 66 per cent to US$176.5 million in the three months ended June, compared with the average analyst estimate of US$235 million. Revenue also declined and did not meet consensus expectations, at US$12.9 billion, according to a company filing on Thursday.

Lenovo fended off HP to keep the top position in global PCs during the past quarter but also saw shipments shrink 18.4 per cent, according to IDC. The company said the unusual action of clearing inventory weakened profitability for its main business unit. Chinese consumers are increasingly reluctant to buy smartphones, laptops and other devices as the world’s second-largest economy slides into deflation.

Lenovo Group fell 3 per cent to HK$7.67 in Hong Kong trading on Thursday.

“The intelligent devices group, which sells PC and smartphones and is the biggest source of revenue, is poised to be the main drag due to sluggish consumer demand and ongoing inventory digestion,” Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Steven Tseng wrote in a memo before results were released.

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Is China’s technology falling behind in the race for its own ChatGPT?

Is China’s technology falling behind in the race for its own ChatGPT?

Uncertainties in the timing of a recovery in demand for PCs and storage gear could further cloud Lenovo’s business prospects, Goldman Sachs analysts Verena Jeng and Allen Chang wrote in a note ahead of the earnings release. Fiercer-than-expected competition in smartphones and AI servers could also weigh on the company.

On the bright side, a demand surge for AI servers could kick-start another round of growth for Lenovo. The Beijing-based company introduced a server brand tailored for the Chinese market, where a slew of local companies from Baidu to SenseTime Group are developing ChatGPT-like AI services. The company sees the rapid development of AI applications generating numerous new opportunities, it said in its statement.

“AI’s higher requirements of computing power and new AI functions will support demand for Lenovo’s end devices,” the Goldman analysts said. “In the overseas market, Lenovo is well positioned with global leading clients and for overall servers business. We expect Lenovo to grow on market share gain, product mix upgrade and product lines expansion.”

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