“Despite a challenging macro-economic environment and ongoing PC industry transformation, Lenovo delivered a strong performance in the 2012/13 fiscal year.
Not only were we the fastest growing among all major PC players, with record market share, revenue and profitability, more importantly, our smartphone and tablet businesses saw dramatic growth,” said Yang Yuanqing, Lenovo Chairman and CEO. “In fact, smartphone shipments were 3.7 times greater than last year globally and we are now number two in the China smartphone market.
This has laid a solid foundation for the successful transformation of Lenovo into a PC Plus leader. Going forward, we will focus our investments on the fast-growing tablet, smartphone and enterprise hardware areas, while working to enhance the profitability of our core PC business. We are very confident in our ability to achieve success in these new areas, just as in the PC business.”
Geographic Overview
Lenovo China achieved a 4.9 percent operating margin on US$3.1 billion in consolidated sales in the fourth fiscal quarter. This was aneight percent year-over-year or US$ 228 million increase of revenue, accounting for 40 percent of the Company’s worldwide sales. Lenovo’s PC Pluspush was strongest in China with 74 percent MIDH revenue growth and a revenue contribution in China of 21 percent.MIDH’s profitability also continued to improve. Lenovo grew its number-one PC market share position in China, the world’s largest PC market, to 31.7 percent, up 1.7 points year-over-year. Lenovo’s PC shipments in China benefited from its deep penetration in emerging cities and the country’s ongoing urbanization.
In the Asia Pacific/Latin America region, Lenovo achieved 11.7 percent marketshare in the fourth fiscal quarter, up 1.1 points. With the regional PC market that was down 8.5percent year-over-year, the Company grew its PC shipments across the region by one percent. Lenovo remained number one in Japan and increased its lead over the competition. Consolidated sales across the region totaled US$1.7 billionor21percent of Lenovo’s worldwide sales, while operating margins were profitable.
Lenovo in Europe, Middle East &Africa grew PC shipments during the fourth quarter by11percent and continued to strengthen its number two position in PCs across the region,with11.8 percentmarket share, an increase of 3.2 share points year-over-year. This is a 30point premium to the market that saw a 19.5 percent decline in the region. The Company had consolidated sales in the fourthquarter of US$1.8 billion, a year-over-year improvement ofsix percent, good for 24percent of Lenovo’s total worldwide sales. Operating profit margin was healthy at 2.3 percent, a 1.4 point increase year-over-year.
Lenovo’s PC shipments in North America in the fourthfiscal quarter increased 9.8percent year-over-year, in a market that fell by about 12percent. In this environment, the Companygained 1.8 share points to a record high market share of 9.3 percent. Consolidated sales grew 13 percent year-over-year to US$1.2 billion in the fourthquarter, or15 percent of Lenovo’s total worldwide sales.In North America, Lenovo continues to have success in the high-end convertible consumer space, with devices like Yoga and Twist taking the number 1 position with nearly 50 percent market share.
Product Overview
Consolidated sales for Lenovo’s laptop PC business worldwide in the fourth fiscal quarter decreased two percent year-over-year to US$4.2 billion, accounting for 53 percent of the Company’s overall sales. During the same period, Lenovo’s worldwide laptop PC shipments increased 0.4 percent, against the backdrop of an overall industry decrease of 14.2 percent. In the fourth quarter, Lenovo introduced several new consumer laptop PCs, led by the IdeaPad U310 and U410, mainstream thin and light Ultrabooks with 10-finger touch, and the IdeaPad Z400 and Z500 “entertainment-optimized” laptop PCs, featuring an immersive sound experience. For business customers, Lenovo introduced the new ThinkPad T431s, the thinnest “T-series” ever, the T-series being Lenovo’s highest selling laptop line.
During the fourth fiscal quarter, Lenovo’s desktop PC shipments held flat worldwide year-over-year,against an industry decline of 12.2percent worldwide. Lenovo’s desktop PC consolidated sales for the same period decreased two percent to US$2.4 billion, or 30 percent of the Company’s overall sales worldwide. In the fourth quarter, Lenovo introduced Horizon, an all-in-one table PC and the Company’s first “interpersonal PC”,a multi-user, multi-touch, multi-mode device for the home that allows users to turn their personal computing experience into a shared computing experience.
Lenovo held strong as China’s number two smartphone maker, seeing rapid growth in all its Mobile Internet Digital Home (MIDH) product lines. The Company’s smartphone shipments grew 206 percent in the fourth quarter, a significant premium to the overall market in China which grew 117 percent. This equates to a3.5year-over-over share point gain, or a fourth quarter market share of 13 percent.Consolidated sales of MIDH products rose 74 percent to US$736 million, nine percent of the Company’s overall sales. Lenovo announced several new smartphones in the fourth quarter, led by the new K900, a premium 5.5-inch smartphone, with a super-slim 6.9 mm profile and high-performance camera; all running on an Intel Atom processor.
About Lenovo
Lenovo (HKSE: 992) (ADR: LNVGY) is a US$34 billion personal technology company –one of the top two PCmakers in the worldand an emerging PC Plus leader – serving customers in more than 160 countries. Dedicated to exceptionally engineered PCs and mobile internet devices, Lenovo’s business is built on product innovation, a highly-efficient global supply chain and strong strategic execution. Formed by Lenovo Group’s acquisition of the former IBM Personal Computing Division, the Company develops, manufactures and markets reliable, high-quality, secure and easy-to-use technology products and services. Its product lines include legendary Think-branded commercial PCs and Idea-branded consumer PCs, as well as servers, workstations, and a family of mobile internet devices, including tablets and smart phones. Lenovo, a global Fortune 500 company, has major research centers in Yamato, Japan; Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, China; and Raleigh, North Carolina. For more information see www.lenovo.com.