Whose Notebook PC Business Is Most Valuable? 11 comments
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Based on our Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis of the notebook PC businesses of Apple (AAPL), HP (HPQ) and Dell (DELL), we've estimated that Apple's notebook business is more valuable than that of HP and Dell combined. Apple's higher valuation is driven by three factors: (1) higher average notebook pricing compared to HP and Dell (2) growing market share (3) higher margins (making Apple notebooks more profitable).
Notebook PC Valuation
Apple: $22 billion
HP: $12 billion
Dell: $6 billion
For all three companies, the notebook PC business is more valuable than the desktop business given the on-going shift in demand from desktops to notebooks so figures above also give you a sense of the comparison for their overall PC businesses.
Key Valuation Metrics
| Avg. Notebook | Notebook Market | Notebook Margins (2009) |
Dell | $814 | 13% | ~5%* |
HP | $714 | 21% | 7.5%* |
Apple | $1,200 | 5% | 33%** |
Source: Trefis estimates
* EBITDA margin estimate
** Gross margin estimate
Additional Detail on Trefis Forecasts
Pricing: We expect pricing to continue to decline for all three notebook makers.
- Apple: $1,200 in 2009 to $699 by the end of the forecast period
- HP: $715 to $526
- Dell: $814 to $413
Market Share: We expect Apple to have the largest market share gain while HP has a small gain and Dell has a small decline
- Apple: 5% in 2009 to 10% by the end of forecast period
- HP: 22% to 23%
- Dell: 13% to 12%
Margins: We expect Apple margins to decline but still remain relatively high overall and that HP will continue to have higher margins than Dell
- Apple (Gross Profit): Decreasing from 33% to 30%
- HP (EBITDA margin): Increasing from 7.5% to 8.5%
- Dell (EBITDA margin): remaining around 5%
Disclosure: No positions
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This article has 11 comments:
($9,474 B)/(7,214M units).
$699 Average laptop price from Apple? This must be your first time covering AAPL.
With the sales to corparte customers comes managed and upsell services opportunities - such as customer factory integration, onsite installation, systems and overall asset management, upsell warranties, cloud based business services, etc. The margin from these businesses are high and not included as part of the hardware reporting. Basically, the hardware is pulling a lot of other business which is also a recurring stream. This is a business model that Apple completely lacks, and where HP has a much smaller mix.
For example, I doubt Dell will even exist in 7 years...
As they say with forecasting, no-one will ever come back and say you got that wrong!
Your price for Mac laptops might be correct, if you include new family additions such as the forthcoming Slate/MacTouch product expected in 2010.
I do doubt Apple will have margins under 32%, with increased market share and volume, I expect their buying power to increase rather than diminish, so expect 35% plus.
Dell has a $29 Billion market cap and $2.2 Billion Net Tangible Assets while Apple has $175 Billion market cap and $27.2 Billion Net Tangible Assets. Dell's future business is forecast worth $27 Billion while Apples is forecast worth $148 Billion (Market Cap minus Net Tangible Assets)
On Nov 08 09:43 AM dmeharc wrote:
> our chip works with absolute certainty.
Or did they mean laptop?
Because if this is really about notebooks, then it is a waste, notebook are just small laptops, and netbooks are just rubbish notebooks,
And all the while laptops will blend twist turn with lots of new names and still be computers that you can take with you.
Perhaps in a few years we will all be talking about apple branded GOOGTEL machine... :)