Revenues in the worldwide semiconductor market have taken a 2.6% step upwards, with Intel and Samsung stretching their lead at the top of the table.

Jamie Davies

May 15, 2017

3 Min Read
IoT chips

Revenues in the worldwide semiconductor market have taken a 2.6% step upwards, with Intel and Samsung stretching their lead at the top of the table.

According to Gartner, total revenues for the segment increased to $343.5 billion over the course of 2016, with Intel taking a 15.7% slice of the market share, and Samsung accounting for 11.7%. The pair grew by 4.6% and 5.9% respectively, but the news was not as positive for Qualcomm, which saw its own revenues decline by 4.1%. This is a worrying sign, but the ongoing dispute with Apple has the potential to cause much more damage in the long-term.

“The semiconductor industry rebounded in 2016, with a weak start to the year, characterized by inventory correction, giving way to strengthening demand and an improving pricing environment in the second half,” said James Hines Research Director at Gartner.

“Worldwide semiconductor revenue growth was supported by increasing production in many electronic equipment segments, improving NAND flash memory pricing and relatively benign currency movements.”

The largest mover in the market was Broadcom, which jumped up 12 places to fifth in the worldwide market share rankings, though this was primarily due to acquisitions. Avago Technologies acquired Broadcom Corp before rebranding to Broadcom Ltd. The new organization saw an increase of 191% year-on-year, now accounting for 3.8% of the global market share.

“The combined revenue of the top 25 semiconductor vendors increased by 10.5% during 2016 and accounted for a 74.9% share, outperforming the rest of the market, which saw a 15.6% revenue decline,” said Hines.

“However, these results are skewed by the large amount of M&A activity during 2015 and 2016. If we adjust for this M&A activity by adding the revenue of each acquired company to the revenue of the acquirer for both 2015 and 2016 where necessary, then the top 25 vendors would have experienced a 1.9% revenue increase, and the rest of the market would have increased by 4.6%.”

While Intel has been facing a tough time in recent years in a search to reinvent itself, not many will complain about 4.6% growth across the year. Its traditional stomping ground will continue to be a cash generator, but a couple of big bets on the autonomous vehicles race could hold some fortunes for the team.

It certainly is a sensible bet; the complexities of a self-driving and self-aware car, which is being tasked in making its own decisions in a fraction of a second, the requirements from companies like Intel and Samsung will be high.

“Just as you need different clubs to get you through 18 holes of golf, you need different kinds of processors to ‘drive’ an autonomous car,” said Kathy Winter, GM of the Automated Driving Solutions Division at Intel.

“Take sensors as an example. Each type of sensor generates a very different kind of data: cameras generate pixels, LIDAR generates point clouds and RADAR generates analogue waveforms. All of these data types need to be processed differently. And if you were developing an autonomous car brain, you would choose very specialized tools perfectly suited to each data type rather than a single gaming processor for all of it.”

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