Hong Kong: Chinese computer maker Lenovo Group said on Thursday it had become the global leader in consumer and notebook personal computers, as sales surged despite a weakening in the PC market.

“Lenovo became the worldwide number one consumer and notebook PC company in fiscal quarter two and remained as the largest PC company in emerging markets, including China,” the company told the Hong Kong stock exchange.

Its share of the overall PC market reached a record high of 15.6 per cent in the July-September quarter, it added, putting it just 0.2 per cent shy of leader Hewlett-Packard.

Lenovo has been outperforming rivals such as US-based HP and Dell, with a rise in PC shipments of 10 per cent in the second quarter to the end of September compared to a year earlier despite softening global demand.

Worldwide PC shipments have been declining as consumer habits change and more people connect to the Internet through smartphones and tablets instead of more cumbersome personal computers and laptops.

However, a survey by research firm Gartner released last month gave Lenovo 15.7 per cent of the overall PC market, ahead of HP with 15.5 per cent.

Gartner said Dell was the number three maker with a 10.5 per cent global market share followed by Taiwan’s Acer with 9.8 per cent and Asus, another Taiwan firm, with 7.3 per cent.

A separate report showed global sales of personal computers are set to show a decline for the first time in 11 years.

The survey by IHS iSuppli said the total PC market in 2012 is expected to contract 1.2 per cent to 348.7 million units, down from 352.8 million in 2011.

That would be the first drop since 2001, but sales have been sluggish for the past two years.

IHS said a strong rebound could still occur in 2013, with more adoption of Windows 8 computers and newer, thinner notebook computers gaining tracking.

Lenovo made the announcement as it said net profit for the three months to the end of September rose 13 per cent to $162.1 million from $143.9 million a year earlier. Revenue climbed 11 per cent to $8.67 billion from $7.79 billion a year earlier.

“Lenovo grew in spite of challenges in the worldwide PC market impacted by the weakening macro environment and product transition,” it said.

“The group recorded 17 per cent year-on-year unit shipments growth during the interim period against the global PC market decline at five percent, according to preliminary industry estimates.”

It booked a 22 per cent year-on-year increase in sales to $16.68 billion, helped by strong growth in demand for its smartphones and tablet devices where it held second place in the Chinese market.