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Lenovo Flags PC Shipment Strain Amid Memory Chip Shortage

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China’s Lenovo Group cautioned that PC shipments are facing growing strain as an intensifying shortage of memory chips continues to hit the industry.

Chief executive Yang Yuanqing told that after the company released third-quarter ‌results that ⁠the world's ⁠largest PC maker has raised prices to offset surging memory costs, while accelerating its push into the fast-growing AI inference market.

"We expect PC unit sales to face ​pressure, but believe we can still grow revenue and maintain profitability," Yang says.

The comments underscore the strain on PC manufacturers as memory-chip shortages, driven ​by AI demand, squeeze margins and threaten production ⁠targets.

Lenovo's third-quarter ‌revenue rose 18 percent to  $22.2 billion, beating expectations of $20.6 billion, but net ​profit fell 21 percent to $546 million, weighed down by a $285 million restructuring charge.

The restructuring aims to sharpen the company's focus on the AI inference market and will cut costs by up to $200 million over three years, CEO Yang said.

Adjusted net profit, which excludes one-time items and non-cash charges, climbed 36 percent to $589 million.

Lenovo's PC, tablet and smartphone business line, which accounted for about 70 percent of its total revenue, reported a 14.3 percent revenue increase for the period. ‌

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Its digital infrastructure group, which includes its AI server business, grew 31 percent despite reporting an operating loss of $11 million due to an investment to scale up its AI capabilities.

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Lenovo's AI server business posted high-double-digit revenue growth, driven by a strong pipeline and deployment of rack-scale solutions based on Nvidia’s GB200 NVL72 design.

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Yang ​says that AI demand is shifting to inference from training, prompting Lenovo to adjust its server portfolio to target the AI infrastructure market, which it expects to triple by 2028. Lenovo unveiled new enterprise servers for AI inference workloads with AMD in early January.

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