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In the IT business, the discount price tags are being placed on computers and servers and routers and other equipment that once belonged to startups and or even more established businesses but are now sitting on shrink-wrapped pallets in a liquidation warehouse somewhere. In turn, that will likely force the Dells and Ciscos of the world to compete on price with their own equipment, forcing them to consider some discounts. After all, that used router is probably still in good shape and is priced at a percentage of what a new one would cost.
Next year. as much as 14 percent of the tech sales could come from the so-called gray market, up from 8 percent last year, Yankee Group analyst Zeus Kerravala told Bloomberg. The hardest hit segment: the $25 billion market for servers and networking devices. Liquidators typically discount their equipment as much as 90 percent off retail prices, he said.
By the numbers: Bloomberg cites court filings to note that the number of businesses filing for bankruptcy was up 42 percent for the year ending in June, climbing to 33,822. At the same time, sales at Florida equipment liquidator are set to increase more than 20 percent this year, to $50 million. The amount of equipment from businesses is up as much as threefold. Most of it is fairly new, just a few years old.
It's not a new trend - some of the same things happened in the tech bust of 2001. But there's a couple of major differences between then and now. First, the economic turmoil is hitting a wide range of industries, from banks to automotive to retail. The use of technology in mainstream industries is far more common today than it was at the turn of the century - meaning there are more businesses trying to dump more equipment than before.
For a buyer. that means the best bargain may be used equipment from a fire sale instead of new equipment from the vendor. It also means we'll need to keep a closer eye on the sales figures coming from those impacted vendors.
posted by Sam Diaz
December 5, 2008 @ 11:24 am
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