China’s Lenovo Group Ltd is in talks to bring Fujitsu Ltd’s personal computer business under its control, allowing the Japanese company to focus on IT services and other businesses, a source with direct knowledge of the talks said. The two companies aim to reach a deal this month, with some 2,000 Fujitsu workers likely move to Lenovo, the Nikkei business daily said on Thursday, without saying where it got the information. The deal, if realized, will make Fujitsu the second Japanese PC assembler after NEC Corp to seek the help of the world’s largest PC maker to stay competitive in the thin margin market. Lenovo and NEC set up a PC joint venture in 2011. Fujitsu’s shares gained 7 percent in early trade to hit their highest level since January, compared with a 0.6 percent gain for the broader market. Lenovo shares were up 2 percent.
Global demand for PCs has been squeezed by sales of smartphones and tablet computers. Smaller makers less able to benefit from large scale production face an uncertain future. In the second quarter of this year, worldwide shipments of PCs were stronger than expected, but nonetheless shrank 4.5 percent from a year earlier to 62.4 million units, according to technology research company IDC. Lenovo accounted for 21.2 percent of those shipments, followed by HP Inc with 20.8 percent, and Dell Inc [DI.UL] with 16 percent. Asustek computers Inc had a 7.2 percent share while Apple Inc held 7.1 percent. Fujitsu shipped 4 million units in the year ended in March, mostly for the Japanese market, the company said. It did not appear in IDC’s top five rankings.