Why it matters: Barrons reports that while artificial intelligence dominates tech headlines, the traditional PC market continues to decline with global shipments falling 1.3% in Q3 2024. Despite introducing AI-capable PCs, this persistent downturn reveals deeper challenges in consumer technology adoption and suggests that AI features alone aren’t enough to drive significant market growth.
The Big Picture: From the pandemic-driven peak of 340 million units in 2021, PC sales have dropped 27% and remain 6% below pre-pandemic levels. As Sherwood points out, even with AI integration, manufacturers face an uphill battle against extended replacement cycles.
- Businesses extend PC lifecycles to 5-6 years
- AI PCs represent 15% of HP’s sales but drive minimal growth
- Nearly 50 million AI-capable PCs expected to ship in 2024 (The Register)
Market Dynamics: Several factors are influencing the slow recovery:
- Windows 10 support ending October 2025
- Optional $30 extended security support available
- Replacement cycles longer than ever before
Regional Variations: Market performance shows significant geographic disparities:
- U.S. market grows 5.6% year-over-year
- EMEA declines 1.5% amid political instability
- Asia-Pacific drops 8.5%, led by China’s economic challenges
Looking Forward: Despite current challenges, analysts project renewed growth by late 2024 and into 2025. The Windows 10 end-of-support deadline combined with increasing AI PC adoption could trigger a significant refresh cycle, with HP forecasting mid-single-digit growth for 2025. It won’t be long until we see ai in some of the best gaming pcs as well.