|
Apple and analysts quietly suspect that iPods and iPhones may be selling Macs nearly eight times faster than any major PC brand.
Few analysts, if any, short the Apple companys stock any more and fewer still were surprised the PC maker posted positive, and record breaking, quarterly PC sales figures, which were announced Oct. 22.
But few expected the pace Apple is making in PC sales.
The manufacturer moved 2,164,000 Macs in the third quarter of 2007, up 400,000 from a year ago and eight times the industry average growth rate, propelling it to the number three PC manufacturer in the U.S., all despite the delay of Leopard, the new version of its OS X, which kept some potential buyers on hold.
More surprising still is the fact that more than half of those Mac sales went to first time buyers, prompting the question: what is selling Macs at eight times the rate of any other PC on the market?
Peripherals are selling the PCs at Apple, according some industry watchers and insiders. Apples wildly popular iPod and iPhone are luring former Microsoft Windows devotees to the Apple brand and Macintosh PCs.
"It is primarily [the] halo effect driving the jump in Mac sales," said Van Baker, a research vice president at Gartner in San Jose, Calif., that is mainly "realized in the Apple stores," he added. "Consumers come in to buy an iPod and stop to check out the MacBook Pros while they are there."
iPod and iPhone sales were also strong in the quarter, with the former seeing a 17 percent year-over-year growth, and the latter selling 1,119,000 units in the third quarter.
|