Published in PC Hardware

Intel supply problems confirmed

by on27 September 2018


More suppliers told that there is a shortage

Another suppler has been told that there is a shortage of Intel chips, just as competition between Chipzilla and AMD heats up.

Martin Wong, president and CEO of Compal Electronics, has warned that the ongoing tight supply of Intel's processors is unlikely to ease until the second half of 2019 and will undermine worldwide notebook shipments during the upcoming peak season

Wong noted that so far Intel has not yet given its downstream partners a clear schedule on when the shortages can be resolved.

Intel has said it has been cooperating closely with its partners to manage their extra orders and its supply priority will be given to Xeon and Core series processors including the latest eighth-generation U and Y series.

Digitimes has noted that Acer claimed that the shortages are not only affecting certain individual brands, but the notebook market as a whole. HP has said something similar.

Wistron originally expected its notebook shipments to grow five to 10 percent sequentially in the third quarter, but has already cut the forecast to five percent or less.

Inventec expects its third-quarter shipments to rise by a single-digit percentage sequentially and stay at the same level in the fourth quarter, while Quanta also expects a single-digit percentage sequential growth for the third quarter shipments, but was unable to give an estimate on its fourth-quarter performance.

However, some market watchers are still optimistic about the situation and expect the problem to improve in the first quarter of 2019.

 

Last modified on 27 September 2018
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