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By: John Moore, Special to CNBC.com | 26 Dec 2008 | 09:10 AM ET
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After such a difficult year for technology stocks, it would seem that 2009 can’t arrive quickly enough. Well, maybe not.

For several components of the tech sector, Wall Street analysts believe 2009 will be a year of transition. The first half will be painful, the second half slightly better, but the real recovery
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won’t occur until 2010.

Here's the outlook for five key sectors.

Mobile Devices

From Apple’s [AAPL  Loading...      ()   ] iPhone 3G to Research in Motion’s [RIMM  Loading...      ()   ] new lineup of BlackBerry handhelds, smart phones were all the rage in 2008. Next year, however, promises to be a tough one for the industry.

“We expect Q1 ’09 to be the worst absolute quarter in terms of year-over-year decline for the industry,” says Michael Walkley, analyst at Piper Jaffray. “We’re modeling a 16-percent drop in year-over-year handset sales in Q1 ’09, and finishing down 9 percent year-over-year for 2009.”

Fueling this slowdown is a global inventory correction. Walkley says that with small and mid-tier distributors having trouble raising capital, global channel inventory will fall to four weeks from its normal six-to-seven week levels.

“Everyone’s anticipating weaker trends into 2009, so everyone wants to hold on to cash,” Walkley says. “This slowdown we’re seeing is much more of an inventory correction than that of demand.”
The strongest players, Nokia [NOK  Loading...      ()   ], Apple, and RIM, will emerge even stronger as struggling companies such as Motorola   [MOT  Loading...      ()   ]and Sony Ericsson see their market share erode even further, say analysts.

Predictions 09 -- A CNBC Special ReportPredictions 09 -- A CNBC Special Report
“If you look at the last downturn, six handset companies ended up going out of business,” Walkley says. “It’ll be survival of the fittest, and you’ll see the potential for some companies to shut their doors, and the ones who survive will come out stronger.”

Online Media

With smart phones becoming mainstream, 2009 may finally be the year the mobile Web gains significant traction. If so, that’s good news for Google  [GOOG  Loading...      ()   ], says Troy Mastin, analyst at William Blair & Co.

“There’s a big advertising opportunity there to extend some of the successful forms of marketing on the Web today to the mobile channel,” he says. “Google is in as good a position as anyone to be a winner.”

New devices from Nokia, RIM, and possibly Apple, will further boost mobile Web use. And Mastin believes more consumers may ditch their home Internet services in favor of using mobile devices for Web access as a way to cut costs.

But changing dynamics leave Microsoft [MSFT  Loading...      ()   ] and Yahoo [YHOO  Loading...      ()   ] in a difficult position.

AP
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“They tend to rely more on display type advertising, and the portal model continues to get marginalized in 2009 due to the adoption of social networks and microblogging sites like Twitter that will continue to cut into the use of portals,” Mastin says.

Computer Hardware

The economic downturn has forced both corporations and consumers to change their buying habits.

Ashok Kumar, analyst at Collins Stewart, notes that businesses are extending the life cycles of their PCs from three years to four years or more.

Consumers, meanwhile, are looking to lower-cost units, which will affect already squeezed gross margins. For those reasons, Kumar doesn’t expect the PC sector to recover until 2010.

“If you look at the notebook category, which until recently has been the primary area of strength, we expect almost all of the growth in notebooks in 2009 to be in the netbook category, which have a sub-$500 SKU,” Kumar says. “The combination of unit shrinkage and a mix shift will cause industry revenues to decline up to 10 percent.”
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Kumar says Hewlett-Packard [HPQ  Loading...      ()   ] is in a good position, simply because it can offset a slowdown in hardware sales with services and software. But things don’t look quite as good for Dell [DELL  Loading...      ()   ].

“On the consumer front, Dell is in a losing war against Apple,” Kumar says. “On the corporate front, they’re heavily exposed to the weakness in North America. It’s a no-win situation, so Dell will clearly end up being a loser.”

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