Dealers Face Threat From Suppliers.
Published:
22 March 1999 y., Monday
Europe_s largest dealers face a serious threat from an unlikely quarter - their main suppliers. The inexorable rise of Dell, which today has a stock market value twice that of Compaq, is forcing IBM, Compaq and Hewlett-Packard to consider direct sales yet again. IBM and Compaq in particular have come out with direct initiatives designed to wow US investors. Europe_s smallest dealers face a much more obvious threat. Dealers are resigned to the fact that vendors are going to sell direct. As long as they are left with a seat at the table many claim they don_t care. That sounds fine, but, in practice, most large dealers in Europe are still making well over half their profits from product reselling, which still accounts for over 80% of their sales on average. On the face of it, this is a real threat. Hewlett-Packard has a systems integration arm with sales of over $1 billion a year. Thanks to Digital, Compaq_s customer service arm is $2 billion strong in Europe. IBM_s systems integration and outsourcing business is a $10 billion business in Europe. But in practice, the big dealers claim to be relaxed about this. They argue that these operations are generally high-end consulting and lack the prosaic volume desktop skills needed to cope with, say, a weekend roll out for a bank with a thousand branches.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Reform of the banking system was one of the key themes at this year's World Economic Forum in Davos, with bankers coming in for a lot of criticism.
more »
Small firms have been hard hit by the economic crisis, and so must be given incentives and support, including easier access to credit, help with innovation, tax breaks and less red tape, MEPs on Parliament's Special Committee on the Financial, Economic and Social Crisis (CRIS), and experts agreed at a workshop on Monday.
more »
The elections and investiture of Porfirio Lobo as President of Honduras have cleared the way for the EU to restore normal relations with the Central American country and negotiations for signing a bi-regional Association Agreement may soon resume.
more »
The European Commission has approved applications from Lithuania for assistance under the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund (EGF).
more »
The European Commission has decided to refer Italy to the European Court of Justice (ECJ) on the basis of Article 108(2) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) for failing to comply with a Commission decision of July 2008.
more »
The EBRD is helping to strengthen the financial sector in Bosnia-Herzegovina (BiH) with a €50 million credit line to the Deposit Insurance Agency of Bosnia and Herzegovina (DIA), the Bank’s first investment in a deposit insurance entity.
more »
In its first investment in the natural resources sector in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the EBRD is providing a €17 million sovereign loan to finance the gasification of the Central Bosnia Canton.
more »
The EBRD is increasing the availability of financing to private businesses in Armenia with a $5 million credit line and a $3 million trade finance facility to ArmSwissBank for small and medium companies (SMEs).
more »
On January 27 the European Commission assessed the action taken by Lithuania, Malta, Latvia and Hungary in response to recommendations proposed by the Commission and endorsed by the Council in July 2009 in respect to the correction of their respective budget deficits.
more »
EUROSTAT announced that Lithuania’s GDP rose by 6.1 % in the 3rd quarter of 2009 versus the previous quarter.
more »