CEO Forum - Q3/2003

by Andrew Ku on July 20, 2003 12:16 PM EST

2. One year from now, do you see a stronger worldwide economy?

CEO #1: Growth is in the Asia and Pacific market, especially China.

CEO #2: Economic indicators are showing some positive signs. I think that mid-July will see Q2 earnings from the US companies. Should the results be good, we will look to certain strengthening of the world-wide economy by end of year. If results are not strong, it may be another difficult year for the economy.

CEO #3: After a long-term worldwide economy decline, enterprises start on internal adjustment. For the IT industry, as long as the infrastructure and integration of networking, broadband and wireless coming to be mature, new applications will bring new market demand. We believe the worldwide economy will ramp up soon.

CEO #4: But it won't be sky-rocketed. We foresee a low single digit growth in 2003.

CEO #5: I am more modest for the coming year. Yes, the war is over, and this can bring up the consuming power. But the recovery and business spending seems to be slow. After SARS, the Asia and Pacific market seems to have gotten better than expect, and we expect the post-millennium upgrade market growing this year.

CEO #6: All governments worldwide are devoting themselves to creating a stronger economy.

The health of the worldwide economy will have an impact on the status of the PC industry. In down times, consumers will tend to hold back, as PCs aren't necessities, and the commercial section will try to stretch out their upgrade cycles. At the moment, many analysts can't agree on the current status of the US economy and where it is headed, which just seems to reiterate some of the mixed signals in the US marketplace. The jobless rate is at an all time high, but stocks and business seem to be steadily recovering. The general consensus seems to be recovery, but outside of stocks and profits, the jobless rate and consumer confidence will be the biggest things that overseas manufacturers keep their eyes. The worldwide the economy seems like it is in recovery, and many analysts point to the move of manufacturing companies to overseas countries like China for the jobless rate in the US. However, demand will most likely need to pick up for an immediate effect.

The future of the motherboard market... AMD in the server market
Comments Locked

9 Comments

View All Comments

  • unclebud - Friday, July 25, 2003 - link

    i am thoroughly impressed! what an excellent idea!
    thanks to anandtech and all others who made this event possible...
    cheers
  • Anonymous User - Tuesday, July 22, 2003 - link

    On the whole a very interesting read, with a surprising range of views from the CEOs.
    I was also surprised that there was no mention of TCPA & it's effects on the both the mobo manufactures & public perception. I was also somewhat surprised on the response to AMDs entry into the server market - I think that AMD are going to have a very up hill stuggle to maintain any hold in this market - even with 64/32 bit processors.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, July 21, 2003 - link

    I was rather dissapointed that TCPA/TrustedComputing was not addressed. Not only do I refuse to purchace any device containing these mis-features, I am willing to pay higher prices to aviod doing business with any company that deals in them. I have influence over puchases made by a number of people and purchases made by a non-profit organization.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, July 21, 2003 - link

    Prove themselves in the enterprise market (ie. VISA)? VISA wouldn't run anything important on Intel. What is anand smoking? VISA runs mainframes and Unix boxes for mission-critical stuff.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, July 21, 2003 - link

    Actually, I was kind of surprised by the _lack_ of insight here. You would think that these CEOs would have more to say, off the record, then was written here. But it's a good start and a unique way to make some noise/news. Nice work.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, July 21, 2003 - link

    You found the only CEOs in the world who didn't blame all their business woes on 9/11. Amazing.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, July 21, 2003 - link

    Keep up the good work. Would like to see the main site updated more often though. Perhaps try to find some new hardware to test? Just a thought.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, July 21, 2003 - link

    Congratulations on a well written, groundbreaking article. Amazing insights: some succinct & punchy comments.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, July 21, 2003 - link

    Wow, intriguing. A unique article, I knew I came here all the time for a reason.

    Good work.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now