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Lenovo to acquire Fujitsu's PC unit

TaiShang

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Lenovo to acquire Fujitsu's PC unit
China Daily, November 3, 2017

Lenovo Group Ltd said on Thursday that it will spend about $224 million to acquire a 51 percent stake in Japanese technology firm Fujitsu Ltd's personal computer business, to boost margins and recapture the top slot in global personal computer shipments.

The Chinese company, which was dislodged from the top slot earlier this year by HP Inc, expects the Fujitsu deal to have a scale-effect on its operations and revenue.

The combined market share of Lenovo (21.6 percent) and Fujitsu (about 4 percent) is bigger than HP which holds about 22.8 percent, according to data from market research company International Data Corp.

The deal also came close on the heels of the company announcing its strongest revenue jump in two years, thanks in part to the faster-than-average growth of its PC business.

Hong Kong-listed Lenovo said in a filing that it would pay for the stake in Fujitsu Client Computing Ltd with 17.85 billion yen ($156.70 million) in cash and the remaining based on performance to 2020. The two sides will also set up a joint venture that will integrate Fujitsu's client resources, manufacturing, research and development capabilities with Lenovo's global presence.

Lenovo said it posted a 5 percent year-on-year jump in revenue to $11.8 billion for the quarter that ended in September. The performance surpassed analysts' projections for $11.3 billion and marked the biggest rise since the same period of 2015, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Yang Yuanqing, chairman of Lenovo, said in a statement that "While sustaining a leading profit level, our PC business has performed better than the average. By boosting marketing and sales capabilities, the data center business is also being effectively reconstructed."

Lenovo has been struggling to revive momentum in personal computers, smartphones and server businesses amid mounting competition from both domestic peers and foreign rivals.

Jacky Zhao, an analyst at IDC, said the Fujitsu deal will contribute to Lenovo's long-term development, as it is trying to team up with all possible partners amid the continued downtrend in the PC market.

"Setting up joint ventures is an effective way to survive the cold winter. It can give Lenovo more resources to revive its business when demand begins to pick up," Zhao said, adding the commercial and consumer PC market is already showing signs of recovery.

Lenovo also said in July, 2016, that it would spend $195 million to increase its stake in its PC joint venture with another Japanese firm NEC Corp.

When it comes to the smartphone business, where Lenovo is facing mounting pressure from rivals such as Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, the company said the turnaround is still in progress.

In the quarter ended in September, it sold 15.3 million units of smartphones globally, up 10 percent year-on-year, with good performances especially in Latin America and Western Europe.

http://www.china.org.cn/business/2017-11/03/content_41839889.htm

***

So, after IBM PC arm was absorbed many years ago, now it is Fujitsu's turn.

Lenovo gets further market share. Fujitsu finds a mighty backer. Win win.
 
Beside Asus and Acer from Taiwan, Lenovo is really did a good job in Personal computer business.

Even sony from japan shut down their Personal computer business, toshiba struggling to get market share, and Now Fujitsu,Ltd got Sold to the Chinese PC Company (Lenovo)

Damn ! Chinese really good when it comes to PC Business, Lenovo together with Asus and Acer conquer the world's PC market share

:china:

@TaiShang @Martian2 @GS Zhou @AndrewJin


In Indonesian market, most people, especially College students in here bought Lenovo and Asus Notebook, following by Acer.
They 3 rule Indonesian PC market share nowadays, because of their Good Reliability, nice specs, and eye catching models.
 
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Beside Asus and Acer from Taiwan, Lenovo is really did a good job in Personal computer business.

Even sony from japan shut down their Personal computer business, toshiba struggling to get market share, and Now Fujitsu,Ltd got Sold to the Chinese PC Company (Lenovo)

Damn ! Chinese really good when it comes to PC Business, Lenovo together with Asus and Acer conquer the world's PC market share
Lenovo is a bad case to brag about, to be honest.

Shrinking market share in PC/Laptops, shrinking share in smartphones, etc., Lenovo performs almost like a joke, if compared with other Chinese high-tech hardware makers, e.g. Huawei, Xiaomi, or BOE.
 
Lenovo is a bad case to brag about, to be honest.

Shrinking market share in PC/Laptops, shrinking share in smartphones, etc., Lenovo performs almost like a joke, if compared with other Chinese high-tech hardware makers, e.g. Huawei, Xiaomi, or BOE.


Don't know about that for sure.

But, what I see in Indonesian market Lenovo PC Business really did a great job here.

Xiaomi in Smartphone market also booming in Indonesia, they have so many Fanbase here
 
Why are Chinese even in the PC/laptop business? The margins are so thin.
is it true most indian cannot afford one?

PWC consumption report
屏幕快照 2017-11-03 23.33.16.png
屏幕快照 2017-11-03 23.32.54.png
 
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I think Lenovo builds sturdy machines if you have used various makes. I did and I guess Lenovo quality is unquestionable. This is independent from their business decisions.

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l8GUunpVD0sSxku4dUPplpdBm-8481.w520.jpg


zQm3FlErYf6SSU22R2tSN3sk9-8481.w520.jpg


aTrgyAW33F6E8m1kz3iUB9h3Y-9283.w520.jpg


YOGA 5 Pro-13IKB 13.9英寸触控笔记本 灰色 80VF00LWCD
 
I think Lenovo builds sturdy machines if you have used various makes. I did and I guess Lenovo quality is unquestionable. This is independent from their business decisions.

***

l8GUunpVD0sSxku4dUPplpdBm-8481.w520.jpg


zQm3FlErYf6SSU22R2tSN3sk9-8481.w520.jpg


aTrgyAW33F6E8m1kz3iUB9h3Y-9283.w520.jpg


YOGA 5 Pro-13IKB 13.9英寸触控笔记本 灰色 80VF00LWCD
Beautiful tablet-look-alike sleek portable computers! Of course Lenovo makes some excellent personal computers, be it the PC; All-In-One; the compact home theater PC (HTPC) such as the Q Series; and many powerful, robust portable computers (notebooks incl. the dual-OSes; Quick Boot and/or tablet hybrid).

The great challenges are the shifting trend of some particular populace from personal computing to the gadget things (mobile phones; tablets) as well as many now have less money to afford the high-ends, they may only be able to afford those low-ends or not even buying at all. I no longer follow the PC trend as in the past... and my own needs for such computing products have passed its peaks too :D:P just have a working one but far from the latest... many years ago I might go pursuing the state-of-the-art ones, the new series, dug deeper my pocket but now no more such wish. Back to those years I spent US$2,000 just got me a middle-level notebook, but today that same nominal amount may possibly get me a sleek Ultra Portable one... personal computing business environment is pretty tough, today the growth is shifting to the mobile gadgets...

But back then who might think that the Japanese powerhouse and prestigious and premium portable computer maker, Fujitsu, will ever sell its share to a Chinese company, Lenovo, one day? :coffee:

。。。
 
Lenovo is a bad case to brag about, to be honest.

Shrinking market share in PC/Laptops, shrinking share in smartphones, etc., Lenovo performs almost like a joke, if compared with other Chinese high-tech hardware makers, e.g. Huawei, Xiaomi, or BOE.

Lenovo computer is doing good lots of home and business users here.

Agree that their smartphone market lags behind huawei, xiaomi and so forth
 
Beautiful tablet-look-alike sleek portable computers! Of course Lenovo makes some excellent personal computers, be it the PC; All-In-One; the compact home theater PC (HTPC) such as the Q Series; and many powerful, robust portable computers (notebooks incl. the dual-OSes; Quick Boot and/or tablet hybrid).

The great challenges are the shifting trend of some particular populace from personal computing to the gadget things (mobile phones; tablets) as well as many now have less money to afford the high-ends, they may only be able to afford those low-ends or not even buying at all. I no longer follow the PC trend as in the past... and my own needs for such computing products have passed its peaks too :D:P just have a working one but far from the latest... many years ago I might go pursuing the state-of-the-art ones, the new series, dug deeper my pocket but now no more such wish. Back to those years I spent US$2,000 just got me a middle-level notebook, but today that same nominal amount may possibly get me a sleek Ultra Portable one... personal computing business environment is pretty tough, today the growth is shifting to the mobile gadgets...

But back then who might think that the Japanese powerhouse and prestigious and premium portable computer maker, Fujitsu, will ever sell its share to a Chinese company, Lenovo, one day? :coffee:

。。。

I agree, Lenovo needs to follow the trend. Even in the mobile market, the speed of innovation is immense. One may end up like HTC.
 
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