Orders for IT hardware from Taiwanese manufacturers have surged to record levels and the average selling price has increased for many products in recent months thanks to an improving economic environment and a gradual recovery in corporate IT spending, according to Market Intelligence Center, a government-backed market research firm in Taipei.Taiwanese hardware makers are the manufacturing backbone of the IT industry and an important barometer of demand from major vendors, including HP and Dell.Overall, hardware shipments from Taiwanese manufacturers are hitting levels not seen in years as orders climb for a range of IT hardware products, including digital still cameras, flat-panel displays, notebook PCs, desktop PCs, servers, motherboards, optical disc drives and mobile phones, according to MIC.This increase in shipments is due to an improved economic environment and a gradual recovery in corporate IT spending, the research firm said. Desktop PC shipments from manufacturers in Greater China rose by 18.9% on an annual basis during the third quarter to 7.5 million units, a level that has not been seen since 2001, according to MIC. In dollar terms, the value of third quarter shipments rose 26.2% from $1.7 billion to $2.1 billion, it said, noting that demand continues to grow “unabated.”Shipments of notebook PCs climbed higher during the third quarter, growing 37.6% to 6.4 million units, a record high, MIC said. The value of those shipments also soared, up 22.4% to an historic high of $4.2 billion, it said. Server shipments also reached a record high during the third quarter, with unit shipments reaching 445,000 units, an increase of 21.4% compared with the same period last year, MIC said. While the average selling price of servers dropped during the third quarter, the value of those shipments reached $381 million, an annual increase of 18.3%, it said.Taiwanese hardware makers posted strong increases in unit shipments for digital still cameras, up 118.1% to 4.8 million units; motherboards were up 24.3% to 33.8 million units; TFT-LCD panels were up 68% to 9.5 million units; optical disc drives were up 35.3% to 26 million units; and mobile phones were up 24% to almost 10 million units, MIC said.Strong demand from vendors has led to shortages of some components, resulting in higher costs or a slowdown in the decline of prices, MIC said.A shortage of TFT-LCD panels and batteries continued during the third quarter and resulted in higher component costs for notebook manufacturers, MIC said. This has raised notebook PC costs and is likely to slow a drop in prices, MIC said. Nevertheless, notebooks still showed a 0.9% drop in average selling price during the third quarter, it said.A range of products, however, saw an increase in average selling price during the third quarter. The average selling price for desktop PCs, for instance, was up 4.9%, while motherboards rose 3.8% and TFT-LCD panels 6%, MIC said. The average selling price for mobile phones also rose during the third quarter to the highest level in nine months, spurred higher by a greater percentage of phones incorporating color displays and digital cameras, it said. Related content news Dell provides $150M to develop an AI compute cluster for Imbue Helping the startup build an independent system to create foundation models may help solidify Dell’s spot alongside cloud computing giants in the race to power AI. By Elizabeth Montalbano Nov 29, 2023 4 mins Generative AI news DRAM prices slide as the semiconductor industry starts to decline TSMC is reported to be cutting production runs on its mature process nodes as a glut of older chips in the market is putting downward pricing pressure on DDR4. By Sam Reynolds Nov 29, 2023 3 mins Flash Storage Technology Industry news analysis Cisco, AWS strengthen ties between cloud-management products Combining insights from Cisco ThousandEyes and AWS into a single view can dramatically reduce problem identification and resolution time, the vendors say. By Michael Cooney Nov 28, 2023 4 mins Network Management Software Cloud Computing opinion Is anything useful happening in network management? Enterprises see the potential for AI to benefit network management, but progress so far is limited by AI’s ability to work with company-specific network data and the range of devices that AI can see. By Tom Nolle Nov 28, 2023 7 mins Generative AI Network Management Software Podcasts Videos Resources Events NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe