China's businesses, government departments and other organisations spent more
than $592m on servers in the three months to June 2007, according to analyst
estimates.
Foreign firms dominated the market, with three major US vendors taking more
than 70 per cent of all sales revenues.
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A total of 156,000 servers were sold in China during the second quarter,
according to research firm
Analysys
International.
The figure represents an increase of almost 28 per cent over the first
quarter, and is 10.8 per cent higher than the same period one year ago.
While server shipments are rising rapidly total revenue is failing to keep
pace, indicating that the average price paid per server in China has fallen
considerably over the past year.
The second-quarter sales total of $592m was an increase of only five per cent
on the first quarter, and sales revenues for the quarter were actually down 5.3
per cent from a total of more than $625m in the second quarter of 2006.
Dell,
IBM and
HP took almost equal
shares of the market in terms of unit shipments, each responsible for
approximately 22 per cent of sales.
However, the three companies appear to be selling into distinctly different
price ranges. IBM took a 35.5 per cent share of the money paid for servers,
compared to 25.1 per cent for HP and only 10.4 per cent for Dell.
Servers based on the standard
Intel-compatible
x86 CPU architecture constituted the lion's share of the market, but sales of
other hardware platforms rose slightly in the past year.
Non-x86 sales increased from four per cent of the total a year ago to
slightly more than seven per cent in the second quarter of 2007.
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