March 17, 2008 5:37 PM PDT

NPD: Apple enjoys huge Mac growth in February

Mac shipments were up dramatically in the fourth quarter of last year, and if recent NPD data is any indication, Apple's doing pretty well again this quarter.

AppleInsider spotted a research note from Pacific Crest Securities citing NPD Group data that Apple's Mac shipments grew 60 percent in February compared with the same period last year, while the entire market grew just 9 percent. NPD's data tracks computer purchases made at U.S. retail stores, which means it excludes much of Dell and all online purchases in general, but it does serve as a weather vane for the PC industry.

Shipments of Macs, like this new MacBook Pro, were up 60 percent in February, according to NPD.

(Credit: Apple)

Notebooks were the primary source of Apple's strength, according to the data, with shipments up 64 percent compared with a 20 percent gain for the overall market. But the difference between Apple's desktop shipments and the industry is stark: iMac and Mac Pro shipments were up 55 percent compared with last year, while industry desktop shipments declined 5 percent.

Amid all the economic concern of the past few months, this is good news for Apple, as strong Mac growth might be enough to offset worries about the iPod division. Gene Munster of Piper Jaffray issued a note Monday that Apple's iPod shipments are tracking below expectations right now, meaning if the trends hold Apple would see a year-on-year decline in iPod shipments for the first time in an awfully long time. Munster thinks the iPod Shuffle price cut will have stimulated demand by the time the final numbers are out, but that situation bears watching.

Mac sales grew by 44 percent in the fourth quarter, Apple reported in January. February marked the first full month of availability for the MacBook Air, and Apple added new chips and new trackpad features to the MacBook Pro and MacBook in late February.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 83 comments (Page 1 of 2)
Skewed
by HaloZero March 17, 2008 6:43 PM PDT
I think if you don't include Dell and HP online sales, your overestimating notebooks sales. Particularly because Dell's main sales come from its online store so your excluding them entirely. It only skews the percent of sales data, not the growth data obviously. Though it would have to exclude Mac online sales too, wouldn't it?
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This changes nothing ...
by lkrupp March 17, 2008 6:43 PM PDT
Apple bashers won't change their opinions and the faboys surely won't change theirs either. But it's good for Mac users in general because more Macs and higher market share means more web sites, software developers, and hardware manufacturers will be forced to make their products OS X compatible if they want to profit from that growing segment. That's all I care about.
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That explains one thing..
by billmosby March 17, 2008 7:09 PM PDT
I thought our Apple store (Salt Lake City) had been getting mighty crowded lately. A couple of years ago, business was brisk, but you could get around in the store without too much trouble. Nowadays you kind of need a shoehorn to get in there!
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My personal experience....
by Galaxy5 March 17, 2008 7:14 PM PDT
I work for a large government agency concerned with things atmospheric and exo-atmospheric. Four people on my team this month switched to Macs. We're still mostly PC, but when your data architects start going to the Mac because it is easier, faster, and can use all the same tools.... I'll put it this way; in the past six months, we've gone from two Mac users on a team of about forty people to ten people using Macs. Everything we're developing is strictly platform- independent, but the contingency of having x86 under the hood for a Windows install (if necessary) is the insurance policy these developers and managers need to accept the machines. That's an insurance policy that they probably won't use, if the rest of us are any indication.
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i'm so sick of hearing "i"stuff
by plee9 March 17, 2008 7:53 PM PDT
ipod, imac, itunes, iphone, iiiiii........... omg. it's so annoying.
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Is it really that suprising?
by pilaa March 17, 2008 8:38 PM PDT
The Apple Mac line of PC's and notebooks are the most versatile of any personal computer on the market today. You can install pretty much whatever OS you chose without fear of hardware compatibility or giving up your existing Windows software investment. This, along with the fact that they put Intel under the hood, was a primary consideration for me to make the switch and is also the reason why I will never look back.
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love it.
by rajeshmail201 March 17, 2008 11:20 PM PDT
Apple products are hands down the best machines today in any industry, not just PCs, phones etc. My same sex partner and I love it. We watch movies together on iMac and the iPhone doubles up as a nice pleasure device. I am not surprised by this growth in their profits. I wish others (the remaining 90% of us) could also appreciate this product.
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No surprise
by igl00lgi March 18, 2008 12:36 AM PDT
We are going to be buying mac laptops this quarter. TCO for MS products forced us to make the switch. We consider the forced upgrades part of our TCO. We were burned when we purchased Vista laptops with no recourse.
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up 60 percent !...
by AppleSuxLeo March 18, 2008 12:37 AM PDT
It`s like saying sales went from 100 to 160. Apple STILL only has 5% market share in USA and only 2.2 worldwide. Still a drop in the bucket compared to all the types of PC`s out there. MSFT had quarterly net profits seven times greater than Apple !!! Apple and Jobs is a lot of hot air.
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Steve Jobs just released the iCrapper...
by AppleSuxLeo March 18, 2008 12:41 AM PDT
but it has proprietary plumbing and uses proprietary toilet paper...therefore it is a minor player in the crapper industry.
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