Computerworld

Study: NZ and Australian server market slumps in Q3

The New Zealand and Australian server market fell significantly in the third quarter of 2001, slipping a massive 14% compared to the previous quarter.
  • Sandra Rossi (Unknown Publication)
  • 19 November, 2001 22:00

          The New Zealand and Australian server market fell significantly in the third quarter of 2001, slipping a massive 14% compared to the previous quarter.

          According to Gartner's Dataquest unit, Q2 saw a fairly cautious return of business confidence, but economic uncertainty following the September 11 attacks in the US led to the Q3 slump.

          Gartner's regional server programme manager, Matthew Boon, says the server market, which is the bellwether of corporate confidence, is struggling.

          "The Asia-Pacific region server market in total has experienced a tough quarter with some of the region's stalwarts starting to show declining growth levels," he says.

          Conditions for vendor market share in Australia have been aggressive with some shifts in the top five.

          Boon says Hewlett-Packard has reclaimed the number four spot from Sun Microsystems while the top three were Compaq, Dell and IBM respectively.

          "This quarter has seen Compaq face continued pressure from Dell and a reinvigorated IBM. Fortunately its strong presence and marketing dominance in Australia has seen Compaq retain its crown in the server space," he says.

          From an overall revenue perspective in Australia, Boon says the top five vendors are IBM, Compaq, HP, Sun and Dell in order of market share.

          "While Sun beat HP from a RISC-only revenue perspective, HP would have to be pleased to snare the number three position from Sun in terms of total server revenue in Australia during Q3," he says.