Trump tariff turmoil toys with PC sales, economy not helping • The Register

Wolrd War Fee The US PC industry is suffering from inventory indigestion caused by resellers over-ordering hardware to avoid Donald Trump’s expected import taxes on China-made kit.
The threat of tariffs on computers assembled in the Middle Kingdom and shipped stateside saw suppliers navigating a “complex regulatory maze” earlier in the year – one that promised to be lucrative if they bought at the right time. The duty on PCs was scheduled for the start of August, but like so many things Trumpian, it hasn’t yet materialized.
Now the tech industry in America is managing the fallout of those destabilizing threats emanating from the White House. Shipments to distributors and resellers fell 1.4 percent year-on-year in calendar Q2 to 18.6 million units. This wasn’t a reflection of the units customers are buying, just what the wholesalers agreed to purchase from vendors.
Sales to suppliers “stagnated,” said Canalys, though this was felt more acutely in consumer where units declined. In commercial, the looming end of support for Windows 10 on October 14 meant enterprise customers continue to replace PC estates – as such unit sales into the channel jumped 4 percent, albeit lower than in previous big OS changeovers where sales typically jumped double digits as the deadline approached.
Microsoft and the computer brands are upping efforts to amplify the noise around the operating system’s end of life and trying to steer customers to upgrade to so-called AI PCs. Dell COO Jeff Clarke said last month that PC growth was “moderate.”
Greg Davis, analyst at Canalys, said businesses had bought into AI marketing stateside, with “business adoption” more than doubling over the last two years and a 50 percent hike in 2025.
“However, this summer, we have seen that the growth rate has slowed slightly for large businesses as concerns of getting stuck in pilot purgatory grew. As businesses begin to encounter problems with integrating AI into workflows, AI-capable PC vendors must demonstrate the value-add their devices could bring.”
The Reg has previously covered why AI PCs aren’t matching expectations of the manufacturers. The prices are too high and the lack of killer applications is a turn-off, especially in a slowing economy where business buyers are acting more prudently.
In terms of the retail landscape, “economic changes are likely to impact consumer spending throughout the rest of the year,” said Davis. “Between persistent inflation and weak job reports in recent months, more consumers are exhibiting cautious spending, and premium electronics are not being prioritized as much as essentials like food and energy expenses.”
“Despite the approaching Windows 10 end-of-support and increasing awareness, consumers in the US are more willing to wait until their PCs need to be replaced due to greatly diminished performance or hardware failures.”
With the mixed outlook, US PC sales into the channel are forecast to grow 3 percent in 2025 to 71 million, if Canalys is correct, up 8.3 percent in commercial, up 9.9 percent in government, up 0.3 percent in education and down 3.9 percent in consumer. ®