FRAMINGHAM, MA – The escalating coronavirus crisis is already impacting IT markets, as buyers and vendors adjust to a new set of assumptions and a new global economic reality, according to International Data Corp.
Based on data indicators in the first quarter, IDC expects to see a significant slowdown in spending on hardware in particular during the first half of 2020, with software and services spending also affected as the crisis reverberates through all sectors of the economy, including supply chains, trade, and business planning.
By the end of 2020, IT spending could grow 1% compared to the original forecast of more than 4% growth, and these forecasts are more likely to trend down than up in the next few weeks.
IT spending is projected to grow 4.3% in constant currency terms this year, reflecting downward adjustments to forecasts for hardware device sales. This is down from the 5% forecast in January, and IDC expects the March Black Book to show an additional downgrade to these forecasts based on the latest indicators and survey data, and the escalating situation in other regions outside China.
"The situation is extremely fluid," said Stephen Minton, vice president in IDC's Customer Insights & Analysis group. "Our monthly data and surveys are clearly pointing in one direction, but it's still early to understand the full impact of the Coronavirus crisis across all sectors of the economy. We are using scenario models to illustrate forecasts have a wider range than usual, and the downside risks in those models seem to be increasing every day. But the duration of the crisis remains a big unknown and will go a long way in determining overall market growth for the year as a whole."
Worldwide IT spending was originally forecast to grow over 5% in constant currency this year, as strong PC sales in the fourth quarter of 2019 gave way to a smartphone upgrade cycle driven by 5G and a recovery for service provider spending on infrastructure, while momentum around digital transformation projects continued to ensure strong demand for software and IT services. The February Black Book downgraded growth to 4.3%, and this is likely to drop closer to 3% in March based on the latest forecast adjustments and scenarios. Based on the crisis extending beyond the second quarter outside China, the worldwide IT market is more likely to grow around 1%.
"The pessimistic scenario is not a worst-case scenario," said Minton. "Things are moving so quickly we need to constantly recalibrate our assumptions and expectations, but the pessimistic scenario reflects an IT market in which weaker economic growth translates into weaker business and consumer spending across all technologies over the next few quarters. Things could get worse but hopefully not."