Worldwide Semiconductor Market Grew 3.7% in 2011 to $301Billion – IDC Expects 6-7% Revenue Growth in 2012
30 Apr 2012
SAN MATEO, Calif.,
April 30, 2012 – Worldwide semiconductor revenues increased more than 3.7%
year over year to $301 billion in 2011, according to the latest version of the
International Data Corporation (IDC)
Worldwide
Semiconductor Applications Forecaster (SAF). The industry weathered
the macroeconomic uncertainties in the U.S and Europe, the earthquake and tsunami
in Japan, China's slow down in the second half of the year, and floods in Thailand.
Meanwhile, device applications, such as smartphones, media tablets and
e-readers, automotive infotainment, notebook PCs, datacenter servers, and
wireless and wired communication infrastructure drove robust consumption of
semiconductors.
IDC's SAF tracks more than 100 semiconductor companies. Over
40 of these companies experienced year-over-year revenue growth greater than
5%, while about the same number of companies saw their revenue decline by more
than 5%.
Intel, with total semiconductor revenues of $51.8 billion in
2011, once again was the overall market leader. It registered impressive revenue
growth and also increased its share of the semiconductor market by three
percent. Samsung was the number two vendor overall with semiconductor revenues
of $29 billion. Rounding out the top 5 chip suppliers were Texas Instruments,
Toshiba, and Renesas Electronics, the latter two benefiting from the strong yen
relative to the U.S. dollar. The next five suppliers were Qualcomm, Hynix, STMicro,
Micron, and Broadcom. Together, the top 10 vendors represented 53% of total
worldwide semiconductor revenues, an increase of 3% over 2010. The top 25 vendors
captured 72% of overall semiconductor revenues for the year.
Many companies grew revenues substantially over the industry
average. For example, Apple enjoyed an impressive 140% year-over-year semiconductor revenue
growth. Other large companies with strong year-over-year growth were Qualcomm,
ON Semiconductor, Intel, and Renesas Electronics. Notable small-to-medium sized
companies experiencing strong growth in 2011 were Spredtrum Communications,
CoreLogic, Microsemi, Sequans, Icera, MegaChips, Nichia Chemical, Osram, RobertBosch,
Skyworks, and Cavium. All these companies benefited from strong growth in the
wired and wireless communications, consumer, automotive, and industrial market
segments.
Within the semiconductor device types, microprocessors
registered strong growth due to high demand and increased ASPs for Intel's
chips. Similarly NAND revenues also increased. However, DRAM saw revenue
decline more than 25% due to supply glut and falling ASPs. Pure play DRAM
vendor Elpida Memory saw revenue declines of 40% in 2011, ultimately leading to
its bankruptcy earlier this year.
Both Asia/Pacific and Americas showed growth above the
industry average, while Japan and Europe showed negative growth. Among the market
segments, semiconductor revenues for the computing segment declined year over
year due to the DRAM price collapse. The consumer segment was essentially flat,
while wireless communication and automotive segments registered over 10% year-over-year semiconductor revenue growth.
"There is a trend underway toward more integration, as
companies try to position themselves for the next phase of growth and as device
applications become more and more intelligent and move toward supporting
high-level operating systems, connectivity, and application processing
capabilities. In addition, as large companies with strong cash balances vie for
competitive positions, mergers and acquisitions will be a key theme," said
Mali Venkatesan,
research manager, Semiconductors at IDC, who led the study and compiled the SAF
results.
A number of mergers and acquisitions came to fruition in 2011,
most notably Qualcomm–Atheros, Texas Instruments–National Semiconductor, SMSC–Conexant,
Broadcom–NetLogic, CSR–Zoran, and Microsemi–Zarlink. This trend is expected to
continue in 2012.
"As mentioned in IDC's 2012 predictions for the worldwide
semiconductor market (see IDC Doc. #232832), the current semiconductor
cycle, which started mid-2011, will bottom out in the second quarter of 2012
and fab utilization rates will pick up and accelerate in the second half of this
year. Overall, IDC expects 2012 semiconductor revenue growth to be in the 6-7%
range," added Venkatesan.
IDC's Worldwide Semiconductor Applications Forecaster
database serves as the basis for all IDC semiconductor supply-side documents,
including market forecasts and consulting projects. This database contains
revenue data collected from more than 100 semiconductor companies and forecasts
the markets to 2016. Revenue for over twelve semiconductor device areas, four
geographic regions, six major vertical markets, and over 90 system devices
markets are also part of the SAF coverage. The next update to the SAF forecast
is scheduled to be released in early July 2012.
About IDC
International Data Corporation
(IDC) is the premier global provider of market intelligence, advisory services,
and events for the information technology, telecommunications, and consumer technology
markets. IDC helps IT professionals, business executives, and the investment
community to make fact-based decisions on technology purchases and business
strategy. More than 1,000 IDC analysts provide global, regional, and local
expertise on technology and industry opportunities and trends in over 110
countries. For more than 48 years, IDC has provided strategic insights to help
our clients achieve their key business objectives. IDC is a subsidiary of IDG,
the world's leading technology media, research, and events company. You can
learn more about IDC by visiting www.idc.com.
Contact
For more information, contact:
Mali Venkatesan
mvenkatesan@idc.com
650-350-6405
Michael Shirer
press@idc.com
508-935-4200
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