March 26, 2008 10:20 AM PDT

Dell, HP confronting laptop battery shortage

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Dell, HP confronting laptop battery shortage
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Dell said on Tuesday the PC industry was experiencing a shortage of laptop batteries partly because of a recent fire at a major supplier, but the company was working with other suppliers to limit any price increases.

Dell, the world's second-largest PC maker after Hewlett-Packard, also said prices of its separately sold batteries used as replacements or for surplus power had gone up because of the shortage caused partly by the March 3 fire at LG Chem's Ochang plant.

LG Chem is the second biggest South Korean battery maker. The fire contributed to a worldwide battery shortage that could affect up to 40 percent of second-quarter shipments at Asustek Computer, Taiwan's No. 2 PC maker, an Asustek executive told Reuters earlier on Tuesday.

A spokesman for Round Rock, Texas-based Dell declined to give the percentage of total Dell sales attributable to separately sold battery packs, but the amount is likely to be minimal as Dell's main products are fully assembled desktop and laptop PCs and business server computers.

"We sell battery packs. The prices of those battery packs for people ordering extra batteries have gone up," Dell spokesman Jess Blackburn said, declining to say by how much.

He added that Dell is "not commenting on what impact, if any, that this is having on the prices of our products," referring to notebook PCs.

"The industry is experiencing battery supply constraints because of these problems," Blackburn added. "Therefore, pricing is being impacted by current availability. But we are working with our partners throughout our supply chain to reduce the impact on our customers."

LG Chem competes in the notebook battery business with Samsung SDI and Sony, among others. LG Chem has said it expected the Ochang plant to start production again in two to three months.

HP spokesman Mike Hockey said the company is in "regular communication" with LG Chem about the situation.

"The full extent of the impact to HP and other OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) is still being determined," Hockey said in an e-mailed statement. "We are aggressively working within the battery cell industry to secure additional supply of battery cells."

Macquarie Securities analyst Daniel Chang said first-quarter notebook battery supply was already constrained and that the fire had driven PC makers to other makers including Sony and Panasonic.

Notebook PCs accounted for 30 percent of revenue in Dell's most recently completed quarter, the same as desktop PCs. Software and peripherals, which include battery packs, made up 17 percent.

Memory prices
PC makers may be able to offset the rising cost of batteries with other components such as PC memory whose prices have been falling.

Citigroup analyst Glen Yeung wrote in a February 29 report that Dell had likely built up memory inventory in its fiscal fourth quarter ended February 1, before the fire.

"Our checks suggest Dell did build DRAM (computer memory) inventories in their fiscal fourth quarter in response to low DRAM pricing," Yeung wrote. "Despite commentary from industry players, we suspect downward pricing will persist in March."

Analysts attributed an increase in Dell's fourth-quarter operating margin to lower prices for components including memory, which fell 40 percent to 45 percent from the fiscal third quarter, according to Citigroup analysts.

Story Copyright © 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 4 comments
Ironic, laptops catch fire now the factory
by fred dunn March 27, 2008 4:53 AM PDT
Just one more reason to not totally depend on offshore sources.
Isn't it convenient how when the price of a commodity goes lower there is some catastrophic event that drives the prices up. In the past it has included memory makers but the common thread is that they are all offshore.
Reply to this comment
common thread is that they are all offshore.
by k2dave April 14, 2008 9:38 AM PDT
The common thread is really that catastrophic events that effect the prices happen in areas where they manufacture the product, which, chances are, are going to be oversees.- BECAUSE THAT'S WHERE IT IS MADE.

Could it be that the reason that the common thread is that all the places that have catastrophic events that raise prices are offshore may just be because that's where most of the stuff is made today? Also perhaps they are made in places where wages are low and so are safety standards?

Is there a US manufacture that makes laptop batteries at all anymore? If not how is one suppose to catch fire and effect the global market?

We in the US also have catastrophic events that vastly effect prices on things made here, look at the hurricane that hit the area of our oil refineries that boosted the price from $1.50/gal to over $3/gal almost overnight.
Batteries
by NeedbatteryUS April 8, 2008 1:01 AM PDT
We have all of of the batteries you need at www.needbattery.com NeedBattery.com is the ultimate source for batteries, adapters and accessories at rock bottom prices. You will always be able to find the top selling brands at discounted prices. Our top selling batteries are for laptops, digital cameras and cordless phones. At NeedBattery.com, we take pride in making your battery search easy. www.needbattery.com
Reply to this comment
by TheManInDboX June 27, 2008 6:59 AM PDT
Boo hoo the outsourcers are going to loose money... cry me a river...
Reply to this comment
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