Khaleej Times

Acer counts on extra life from gamers to escape PC purgatory

- Samson Ellis and Cindy Wang

Acer is finally showing signs of life. Now it’s hoping a growing legion of gamers will help pull it out of a multi-year rut.

Once the global leader in laptop sales, Acer is counting on high-end gear such as displays and slick gaming rigs to sustain a recovery, with the company projected to show its first annual revenue growth in seven years. chief executive officer Jason Chen argued in an interview that gaming and esports will buttress a turnaround effort based on linking its hardware to virtual reality and artificial intelligen­ce-based applicatio­ns.

Acer is one of the highest-profile victims of the post-smartphone PC implosion. Despite surging since reporting better-than-expected profit in November, its shares are still down almost 80 per cent from a decade’s high in 2010. But while global PC sales fell again last year, products targeted at serious gamers rose to between 13 per cent and 15 per cent of Acer’s revenue, Chen said in the interview.

Revenue from gaming gear almost doubled in January, Chen told reporters on Wednesday. He also shed light on plans to hive off different divisions, confirming that Acer will apply to Taiwanese regulators to float StarVR — its virtual reality venture with Sweden’s Starbreeze — and its smart parking systems business.

“The only other sport bigger than e-sports is soccer, the World Cup,” Chen, who took up his post at the start of 2014, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television this month. “The sky is the limit.” Acer faces competitio­n from the likes of Razer to Asus and MSI in everything from gaming mice to headsets. But its growing

The only other sport bigger than e-sports is soccer the [fifa] World Cup. The sky is the limit Jason Chen, CEO of Acer

momentum in gaming gear may stem from price competitiv­eness. The company’s top-of-the-line Predator rigs have won strong reviews for design and performanc­e and, at up to $2,500 apiece, compares favourably with the likes of Dell’s Alienware machines.

Morgan Stanley equity analyst Melrose Chiu expects Acer’s gaming sales to soar 70 per cent this year — but other product segments should remain flat.

Chiu, however, is one of five analysts to have downgraded Acer in the past three months, citing its pricey valuation.

Chen in particular talked up Acer’s prospects in pro-gaming. Esports revenue is expected to surge an average of more than 32 per cent annually to $1.5 billion through 2020, according to gaming consultanc­y Newzoo. And viewership for competitiv­e matchups isn’t expected to ease anytime soon. Newzoo estimates 385 million people watched esports in 2017; this year’s Super Bowl attracted a US audience of 103.4 million, its lowest in nine years.

He was careful however to emphasise that Acer will stick to its fundamenta­ls — PCs — even as it moves upscale. “It won’t take up more than 50 per cent of our revenue but it will grow to more than where we are today,” Chen said. — Bloomberg

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Acer is one of the highest-profile victims of the post-smartphone PC implosion, but it’s still game for competitio­n. —
Bloomberg Acer is one of the highest-profile victims of the post-smartphone PC implosion, but it’s still game for competitio­n. —

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