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ASUS will make more from mobile devices than PCs by end of 2017

by Mark Tyson on 14 August 2015, 13:11

Tags: ASUSTeK (TPE:2357)

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ASUS has recently reported on its second financial quarter of 2015. This usually represents the worst of its results for the whole year and as you might predict, given market trends, this year's trough was even deeper than last year's. It shipped 4.3 million laptops and 500,000 desktops in Q2 2015. In the same quarter last year it sold 4.8 million laptops and 600,000 desktops. As with many similar companies, ASUS is therefore pushing towards developing and selling more mobile devices.

Moving into the last two quarters of 2015, ASUS is trying to boost demand for its laptops to maintain shipment volumes above 20 million per year, reports DigiTimes. To this end it has been launching laptops in the gaming segment, ultra-portable segment and high-price-performance ratio segment such as the T100 series.

It expects that Q3 figures for laptop and desktop shipments should reach 4.8 million and 600,000 respectively. ASUS hopes to concentrate laptop shipping growth in the gaming and Zenbook ranges, which offer better margins. While these two ranges bring in about a fifth of company revenue, ASUS expects them to generate half or more of its profits during H2.

Computer peripherals and components are going to benefit from more cross-department cooperation and collaborative marketing. AUS RoG gaming branded items are seen as offering potential for expansion.

Looking at alternative computing devices as sources of revenue, ASUS foresees that by the end of 2017 it will generate more cash from mobile devices than PCs. It also expects profits from mobile device sales to catch up with those from the PC sector, despite the commoditisation we are seeing in that part of the smartphone market not dominated by Apple.

In its most recent (Q2 2015) results ASUS shipped 1 million tablets bringing its total to 2.5 million for H1. However last year it had sold 4.1 million by this time. It aims to boost its tablet sales in H2 by launching the new ZenPad range, and hopes to get more tablet sales to enterprise, bravely maintaining its 7 million goal for the whole of 2015. In the smartphone market ASUS shipped 5 million units in Q2 (better than the 4 million sold in Q1) and expects to ship 6 million next quarter. It is targeting sales of between 17 and 20 million ZenPhones for the year.



HEXUS Forums :: 4 Comments

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Personally wouldn't by another tablet from them. picked up the Asus MeMO Pad 7 and it's loaded with bloatware that you can't remove. Not the nicest from a hardware perspective but you can live with that due to the price, but forcing all their ‘wonderful’ apps onto you, as well as adding links to ‘100 free games’ when you update the system software is inexcusable.

Been tempted by their Windows laptop/convertible offerings for a while now though, aside from the recent bios tricks you know you can un-install everything back to the basics.
I recently got the Zen Phone 2 and I love it. Its a massive upgrade from my Moto G but it too comes with a mass of bloatware!
jimbouk
Personally wouldn't by another tablet from them. picked up the Asus MeMO Pad 7 and it's loaded with bloatware that you can't remove. Not the nicest from a hardware perspective but you can live with that due to the price, but forcing all their ‘wonderful’ apps onto you, as well as adding links to ‘100 free games’ when you update the system software is inexcusable.
nar53
I recently got the Zen Phone 2 and I love it. Its a massive upgrade from my Moto G but it too comes with a mass of bloatware!
Root and then use Titanium to zap those unwanted apps? Actually I find Samsung's app bloat pretty intrusive, but I've not got around to zapping it all. My Lenovo Yoga2 tablet came with “value add” like Skype etc, and while you can uninstall it easily (without root - good one Lenovo), unfortunately every OS update/patch puts it all back on again (annoying, but I can see why).

ZenPhone2 looks pretty interesting - I've seen prices around Ā£220-260 for a unit with 4GB RAM and 64GB internal storage, running Android L. Which, by my naive standards, is into “bargain” territory. Unfortunately there's the usual questions about software support and how good that Atom is against it's ARM competition? Then again, my (Atom powered) Yoga2 tablet makes the (Exynos/ARM powered) Samsung competition look like they're running in slowmo.

EDIT: Actually looks like the reviewer over at XDA agrees about unnecessary junk, and the (linked to) review also reveals news both good and bad. On balance I think I'll pass on the ZP2 and maybe wait for the price of other headliners to drop… or just stick with the G3 I have now. ;)
Because we need more mobile devices as there isn't enough choice competition out there atm :S Even massive mobile focused companies such as HTC are having to expand because they're struggling as its become such a crowded market even now, let alone in 2017!