This year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES) seems to be all about netbooks. Attendance was down significantly for CES 2009 compared to previous years amid a slumping economy. Technology companies seem to be more interested in evolutionary improvements in performance and form factor.than hardcore R&D as little game-changing technologies were found at the show.
All about Netbooks
Investment bank Deutsche Bank attended CES last week in order to assess new products and near- term CE demand. The firm writes attendance at the show was down significantly versus previous years, reflecting the weak global economy. Credit Suisse also attended the show and shares some insight into some new gadgets / technology amid relatively low expectations on both fronts.
New gadgets
There were relatively low expectations for new hardware at CES 2009 and it is probably a fair description to say the trade show did not disappoint lowered expectations. Below Credit Suisse lists a few of the relative standouts in what was a fairly mediocre crowd of products:
An alternative Wall Street bank attending the show, Deutsche Bank, says that in the electronics hardware sector, most of the new product introductions at CES represented evolutionary improvements of form factor and performance. However, netbooks seemed to garner the most attention from vendors and attendees. As the firm discussed in previous industry reports, it expect netbooks to cannibalize low-end notebooks and get more competitive through 2009 due to the strategic and growth implications of the segment for electronics OEMs.
Not surprisingly, demand for consumer electronics sounded weak, with areas like notebooks, inkjet printers and digicams all suffering from slowing end demand. Furthermore, the new products seen at the show seem insufficient to stimulate incremental demand. With consumers in de-leveraging mode, the bank feels a subdued CES show is indicative of continued weak consumer electronics demand, which will likely last through the bulk of 2009.
Subdued show
Deutsche Bank opines it was obvious from the minute the team exited the airplane that CES would be different this year. The cab line at the airport was short.
Casinos were empty and dinner reservations were easily obtained.
Attendance from both presenters and attendees appeared to be down significantly from last year...probably over 20%. The bank believes reduced attendance reflects the weakening global economy, increased scrutiny of budgets, and waning consumer hardware demand. Unfortunately, little game changing technologies were found at the show as most new products seen were evolutionary improvements in performance and form factor.
Netbooks compete with notebook market
The product area garnering the most attention in the sector covered by the bank at CES was netbooks. The firm believes their combination of adequate performance and attractive price points will support strong growth of the netbook segment in 2009 (at the expense of low-end notebooks).
While netbooks lack some features commonly found in traditional notebooks (i.e., DVD drive, CPU power) the firm believes many consumers are more willing to sacrifice performance and screen size for price in this economy. Over time, its believed the lower cost of entry to mobile computing will stimulate total units (driving some incremental volume).
However, in the short term, Deutsche Bank expects increased substitution and average-selling-price / mix pressure to more than offset any incremental unit demand.
Many in industry point to lower performance and the small keypad / screen size as major obstacles to netbook adoption. However, existing netbooks have adequate power for most computing tasks such as digital media playback, video game play, web-surfing and email. In addition, Microsoft indicated Windows 7 will be geared to run efficiently on Netbooks, providing its support to this emerging hardware platform. To boot, the firm tested 10 inch and 12 inch netbooks at CES (running XP, basic Vista), which it found perfectly adequate for full-time use (from a size / comfort standpoint).
|
Comments are reviewed by the administrator and published after approval. Please keep your comments appropriate and on topic.