The world's biggest maker of personal computers,
Lenovo, has seen a 23% jump in net profit as laptop sales outperformed industry
average.
For the three months to June, net profit rose to $214m (£128m). Revenue
in the same quarter jumped 18% from the previous year to $10.4bn.
Lenovo's core business lies in personal computers and accounts for 49%
of total revenue in the quarter to June.
Laptop sales rose 12% in that period, when the industry was in a
downturn.
Lenovo said the PC industry saw a 3.7% decline in laptop shipments for
the three months to June, when compared to the same period last year.
The latest figures indicate Lenovo has maintained its status as market
leader for PCs, with a higher global market share of nearly 20% when compared
to last year.
In a statement which
accompanied the earnings release, Lenovo Chairman Yuanqing said: "This
has been a quarter of milestones for Lenovo - record PC share, a number three
ranking in worldwide tablets for the first time and an even stronger number
four global smartphone position."
Mobile
division
Lenovo has been making moves to diversify away from the
shrinking global PC market. Its "Mobile Device Business" includes
smartphones and tablets.
For the first time ever, the company said it had sold more
smartphones than PCs, with a record volume of 15.8 million units. That is a 39%
gain from the previous year.
Mr Yang also said: "As the PC industry recovers, the
smartphone market continues its shift from premium to mainstream, and our
acquisitions of Motorola Mobility and IBM x86 proceed toward completion, we see
even more opportunity to keep growing rapidly.
"Lenovo continues to outperform the market and meet our
commitments to improve profitability in our core businesses, while building
strong pillars for future growth across our entire portfolio."
The company has been on an acquisition spree. Earlier this
year it struck a deal to acquire IBM's low-end server unit.
Lenovo is also in the process of acquiring Motorola's
handset business from Google.
Both deals are awaiting regulatory approval, which analysts
say could come as early as the third quarter of this year.
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