Computing is making a comeback in the
first quarter of 2026, with consumers focusing heavily on buying
high-performance hardware.
A Market Polarised by Power
James Bates, Senior Retail Analyst
at CONTEXT, points out that the market is currently splitting based
on computing power. Smartphones and tablets of the past ten years
are now giving way to major computing setups. In Germany and
Spain, the sales of high-end desktops and laptops are
skyrocketing, particularly those built to handle heavy AI tasks.
The Revenue Rebound
One of the biggest surprises of Q1
is that market struggles are translating into higher revenues.
Shortages in parts and rising memory costs have made retail prices
jump. For stores, this means a highly profitable quarter for storage
and memory. Even though there are fewer items to sell, the higher
price per gigabyte is boosting total earnings.
A Regional Comparison: The UK Outlier
There are notable differences
amongst Europe’s top six economies. Poland and Spain have emerged as
primary growth engines, with Poland seeing a staggering +68% gain in
desktop revenues, while the UK remains an exception. Facing a
contraction in both notebooks (-17.2%) and desktops (-10.9%),
British shoppers seem to be waiting for prices to settle down before
buying new hardware.
Rethinking the Tech Budget
People are changing how they spend
their money. Upgrading to the newest smartphone is no longer an
automatic choice. Mobile device sales are dropping as
computer sales rise, due to consumers redirecting their money
to upgrade their home and office setups.
This leaves retailers with one clear
takeaway for mid-2026: The PC is back at the centre of the tech
budget.
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