Tuesday, September 11, 2012

JP Morgan Raises Tablet Forecast, Lowers PC Forecast

JP Morgan has raised its forecast of tablet sales and revenue, while lowering sales and revenue forecasts for PCs. 

The revised 2012 tablet revenue estimate is $57.7 billion, where it was $52.8 billion previously. The revised tablet unit estimate is 118.5 million, compared to 106.8 million previously. 

The implied 2012 growth rates of revenue and unit estimates are 50.4 percent and 67.5 percent, versus 40.5 percent and 53.5 percent previously. 

JP Morgan also expects increasing pressures on pricing as tablet vendors test price elasticity. So JP Morgan also has revised its 2012 tablet average selling price to $487, down from the $495 previously expected. And JP Morgan admits the ASP reduction "may not be conservative enough," implying a belief that ASPs could drop more than that. 

None of those revisions will come as much of a surprise. Tablets are the new "hot" device in the consumer electronics business. Moreover, tablets are well suited to the growing "main" function of a digital appliance, namely content consumption. 

In past years, the demand for content consumption was clearest in the case of MP3 players. These days, the primacy of other forms of content consumption, which had been only latent when most people consumed such content on PCs, now increasingly is visible. 

As it turns out, for many people, the lead applications for an Internet-connected device revolve around content consumption, not content creation, as was the case for PCs. 

So do tablets "replace" PCs? Yes and no. Tablets are not substitutes for PCs where it comes to many forms of content creation. But tablets are useful and viable substitutes for the consumption related functions of a computing device connected to the Internet. 



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