May's sessions painted a consistent
picture of the European IT distribution market: strong revenue
momentum on the surface, with growing complexity beneath.
The full-year forecast was revised
upward to 4.4% growth following a remarkable Q1, which came in
at 7.8%, well above the 3-4% initially projected. This exceptional
first quarter was largely driven by aggressive forward buying,
with resellers stocking up on PC infrastructure and components in
anticipation of further price hikes rather than an organic surge in
end-user demand.
Growth is expected to decelerate to
3.6% in Q3 and 1.7% in Q4 as IT budgets come under increasing
pressure. The component shortage story, with RAM prices up
approximately 140% year-on-year and server configurations up nearly
50%, remains the dominant force shaping revenue figures across
virtually every category.
Component Prices: First Signs of Stabilisation
Our PriceWatch Component Index
analysis, using July-September 2025 as a pre-shortage baseline,
offered a nuanced picture across the three main categories:
- RAM, which had nearly quadrupled from the
baseline, is now showing signs of stabilisation, flattening out
in March and April.
- SSD prices roughly
doubled, with France and the UK still trending upward while
other major markets appear to be levelling off.
-
HDD prices, which rose the least (peaking around 50% above
baseline), are now in a downward trend in most countries, the
clearest sign of market correction so far.
PCs: Revenue Up, Units Down
The latest personal computing data
confirmed a notable early-Q2 shift. While Q1 saw strong growth in both
units and revenues, early Q2 told a different story:
- Notebook revenues still up 12% year-on-year, but units in
decline.
- Desktop revenues still positive at 2%, a sharp
slowdown from Q1's 20%.
- Average sale prices up
approximately 11% for both categories.
The culprit is not supply but a
demand pullback: elevated stock levels from Q1 forward
buying, combined with sharper-than-expected price rises, are
suppressing reseller orders. One standout development was the Apple
MacBook Neo, launched in March at a more mainstream price point,
which captured 33% of Apple's notebook sales in European distribution
in March and April, pushing Apple's notebook market share from around
9-10% in 2025 to over 14% by April, primarily at Intel's expense.
Cybersecurity: Identity Remains the Priority
The cybersecurity market accelerated
into Q2, with April ending approximately 10% up year-on-year.
Germany led at +40%, followed by Italy (+32%) and Sweden (+61%).
Investment priorities are clear:
identity and access management is up 18%, infrastructure protection up
9%, and data security bounced back strongly to +13%, driven partly by
compliance requirements from the EU Data Act and EU AI Act. MSP growth
continues to outpace the wider market at 17% year-on-year, with
a notable Italy spike attributed to a major government IT breach, new
NIS 2 compliance deadlines, and a resulting wave of outsourcing contracts.
Regional Spotlights
Poland was extensively
covered this month, with government digitisation programmes
including an AI labs initiative deploying 192,000 laptops and 12,000
PCs to schools, and record cybersecurity investment exceeding 5
billion Polish zloty, driving exceptional year-on-year growth in
desktops, servers, and disk storage, in some cases exceeding 40%.
The Baltics recorded 19%
overall revenue growth in Q1, with servers up 134% year-on-year and
graphics cards up 95%, fuelled by major private-sector investment.
Notably, 14% of Baltic server sales in Q1 were AI-capable
(accelerated) servers.
The UK delivered April
revenues up 22.6% year-on-year, driven by infrastructure spending
through corporate resellers. Consumer channels remain under
pressure, with e-tailer consumer sales down over 12% in Q1,
reflecting persistently low consumer confidence.
Enterprise Networking and UPS:
Demand Returning
Enterprise networking showed a
welcome turning point in April, delivering 37% revenue growth in
switching. Wi-Fi 7 grew nearly 200% in revenue year-on-year,
despite early discussion about customers potentially skipping directly
to Wi-Fi 8 (whose formal certification is not expected until 2028).
In the UPS market, Q2 is running at
approximately 5% growth year-on-year, driven by
higher-protection systems in SMB and infrastructure environments.
Online UPS grew roughly 38% and Line Interactive around 20%, while
offline entry-level products declined, consistent with a broad market
shift toward more resilient solutions.
The recurring theme across May's
sessions is a market navigating a delicate balance: near-term revenue
strength sustained by price inflation and forward buying, set against
the real risk of demand exhaustion in H2 as budgets feel the strain.
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