Jul 30

By Ruben Bicho

LISBON (Reuters) - Intel Corp (INTC.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), the world’s biggest microchip producer, expects no slowdown in global demand for personal computers despite housekeeping problems in the United States and in other countries, Intel Chairman Craig Barrett said on Wednesday.

He also told reporters in Lisbon, where he was to sign a draft deal with the Portuguese government to make 500,000 cheap portable computers for schools, that the company was upbeat on demand prospects for low-cost computers and broadband wireless systems.

“We gave a relatively upbeat business forecast, aphorism that despite the economic problems in the United States our business is so international that we didn’t see any slowdown in the PC market,” he said.

Barrett said a range of economies have not been seriously affected by the U.S. slowdown, providing hope that the crisis will have limited implications.

“We are seeing … that the slowdown in the U.S. hasn’t spilled everywhere else. The globe’s economy is not as robust as it could be, but it’s not a disaster.”

Apart from broadband wireless, and the next generation of low-cost computers, Intel also remains bullish through the introduction of more digital capability in health care.

“There’s a huge opportunity to use it not just in the back-office goal in remote diagnostics,” he added.

Referring to the European Union’s recent antitrust charges in equalization of Intel, Barrett said price reductions for microprocessors and computers have an “anti-inflationary nature” while prices are rising globally and also said that was a testimony to high competition in the sector. 

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