Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Manufacturer
    Sell Buy Corporation Information      
Home > Resources
Manage  
Ambitious plans shake up rail, ports and airline sectors
World's top fur supplier hooks up with Chinese designers
Dongfeng in talks with Volvo to make trucks
Chinese bank cards accepted by 24 countries and regions
Investment quotas for QFIIs expected to be increased
China's courts see rise in IPR violation cases after WTO entry
carve out  
RMB hits new high against USD for 7th time since New Year
Chinese monk crawling to India for harmonious world
Carrefour to open 20 stores in China this year
World's longest double-tube highway tunnel opens in NW China
China to revamp statistical methods to assess economic health
Official report estimates oil price to stay high in 2007
Resources  
China to reduce tax gaps between companies
China posts double-digit growth in returns for telecom services
Banks, automakers boost mainland's stocks
China to commercialize policy banks
Top bank: minimum bank balance violates regulations
Customers unhappy about levels of service
 
PC sales value growth in China tempered by price war
BEIJING, Jan. 24 (Xinhua) -- Sales of personal computers in China grew steadily in 2006, prompting the outbreak of a price war, according to CCID (China Center for Information Industry Development) Consulting, a market research company under the Ministry of Information Industry.


Last year 23.37 million desktop PCs, laptops and servers were sold nationwide, up 17.5 percent on the previous year. But owing to price cuts, their sales value, which stood at 130.4 billion yuan (16.7 billion U.S. dollars), only rose by 7.7 percent.


"Since price-cutting is the main method of competition in the desktop PC business, enterprises failed to make more profits," CCID Consulting CEO Li Jun told Xinhua on Wednesday.


The price war was even fiercer in the laptop market. Some major brands sold for lower than 5,000 yuan (641 dollars) per unit, Li said.


Large price reductions caused many buyers to favor notebooks to desktop PCs, particularly in cities and on campus.


Li predicted that demand from smaller enterprises, families and rural areas would continue to drive China's PC market over the next few years.


According to CCID Consulting, the market's sales value will reach 220 billion yuan (28.2 billion U.S. dollars) in 2011.

Contact us | About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2004-2006,eng.863171.com Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.