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| [February 27, 2013] |
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Worldwide Server Market Rebounds Sharply in Fourth Quarter as Demand for x86 Servers and High-end Systems Leads the Way, According to IDC
FRAMINGHAM, Mass. --(Business Wire)--
According to the International Data Corporation (IDC)
Worldwide
Quarterly Server Tracker, factory revenue in the worldwide server
market increased 3.1% year over year to $14.6 billion in the fourth
quarter of 2012 (4Q12). This was the first quarterly increase of factory
revenue in five quarters. Worldwide server shipments decreased 3.9% to
2.1 million units in 4Q12 when compared with the same period in 2011.
For the full year 2012, worldwide server revenue decreased 1.9% to $51.3
billion when compared to 2011, while worldwide unit shipments decreased
1.5% year over year to 8.1 million units.
On a year-over-year basis, volume systems and high-end systems
experienced 4.2% and 6.4% revenue growth to $9.1 billion and $4.1
billion respectively in 4Q12. At the same time, demand for midrange
systems experienced a year-over-year revenue decline of 10.0% to $1.5
billion in 4Q12. The volume segment and high-end systems were both
buoyed by a favorable technology refresh cycle with volume systems
benefiting from continued demand for x86 servers deployed as part of
consolidation and virtualization initiatives while increased spending
for high-end systems was helped by strong demand for IBM System z
mainframes.
"Despite experiencing the first quarterly growth in factory revenue in
over a year, the server market continued to show signs of lumpiness in
the fourth quarter," said Matt
Eastwood, group vice president and general manager, Enterprise
Platforms at IDC (News - Alert). "IDC forecasted that server demand would begin to
improve in the second half of 2012 following a number of critical
product refreshes which occurred in the first half of the year. While
this did happen in the fourth quarter, market demand was uneven with the
U.S., Asia/Pacific and Latin America all experiencing sharp growth,
while demand in all other regions remained soft. Average selling prices
for servers increased sharply in the quarter as large and small
enterprises continued to invest heavily in new server capacity to drive
additional consolidation and virtualization initiatives."
Overall Server Market Standings, by Vendor
IBM held onto the number 1 spot in the worldwide server systems market
with 36.5% market share in factory revenue for 4Q12, as revenue
increased 3.1% year over year. IBM experienced significant improvements
in demand for its System z mainframes aided by a strong product refresh
cycle. The fourth quarter also delivered the highest quarterly revenue
IBM has achieved in System z in more than a decade. HP held the number 2
spot with 24.8% share for the quarter as revenue decreased 3.2% compared
to 4Q11. Although HP experienced solid demand for its x86-based ProLiant
servers, it was offset by weak Itanium-based Integrity server demand in
the quarter. Dell (News - Alert) increased server revenue by 5.7% year over year and
maintained third place with 15.1% factory revenue market share in 4Q12.
Three companies shared the number 4 market position, with Oracle,
Fujitsu (News - Alert) and Cisco all locked in a statistical tie* in 4Q12.
Additionally, this was the first quarter that Cisco maintained a
position in the top 5 server rankings.
Top Server Market Findings
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Linux server demand was positively impacted by high performance
computing (HPC) and cloud infrastructure deployments, as hardware
revenue improved 12.7% year over year in 4Q12 to $3.0 billion. Linux
servers now represent 20.4% of all server revenue, up 1.7 points when
compared with the fourth quarter of 2011.
-
Microsoft Windows server demand continued to increase in 4Q12 as
hardware revenue increased 3.2% year over year. Quarterly revenue of
$6.7 billion for Windows servers represented 45.8% of overall
quarterly factory revenue, the same share as in the prior year's
quarter.
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Unix servers experienced a revenue decline of 24.1% year over year to
$2.6 billion representing 17.6% of quarterly server revenue. This was
the sixth consecutive quarter of revenue decline in the Unix server
market and all major Unix server vendors experienced a revenue decline
when compared with the fourth quarter of 2011.
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After five consecutive quarters of revenue declines, IBM's System z
mainframe running z/OS increased revenue 55.6% year over year to $1.8
billion, representing 12.3% of all server revenue in 4Q12.
"The IBM System z mainframe platform had its highest quarterly revenue
since 1997, generating nearly $2 billion and driving the overall server
market to positive growth in the quarter," said Jean
S. Bozman, Research Vice President in IDC's Enterprise Platforms
Group. "This dramatic growth was due to several factors: technology
refresh, new products such as zEnterprise, new accounts in emerging
economies, and consolidation of some enterprise Linux workloads onto IBM
System z, using the Integrated Facility for Linux (IFL) specialty
engines. Although revenue results for System z are traditionally heavier
in the fourth quarter, this accelerated acquisition shows the breadth
and depth of the IBM mainframe installed base."
X86 Industry Standard Server Market Dynamics
The x86 server market experienced sharp revenue growth in 4Q12 as
systems based on Intel's (News - Alert) Sandy Bridge processor -- which was launched in
early 2012 -- experienced strong demand which helped drive sharply
higher average selling prices across the market. The x86 server market
accelerated in 4Q12, increasing 6.0% in the quarter to $9.7 billion
worldwide as unit shipments decreased 3.7% to 2.1 million servers.
Despite the shipment decline, this is the highest quarterly revenue ever
reported for x86 servers as the architecture accounted for 66.2% of all
server spending. HP's x86 factory revenue increased 4.4% and it
continued to lead the market with 32.7% revenue share. Dell experienced
5.7% year-over-year growth in x86 server revenue and retained second
place with 22.9% revenue share. IBM continues to hold third place with
16.7% x86 server revenue share following a 2.3% year-over-year decline
in revenue. Cisco moved into the fourth position in the market with 5.0%
revenue share as a result of 50.7% revenue growth when compared to 4Q11,
while Fujitsu and Oracle (News - Alert) tied* for fifth position with 3.1% and 2.7%
share respectively. As a result of a strong demand throughout the year,
worldwide x86 server revenue for 2012 increased 4.1% to $35.8 billion,
while worldwide x86 unit shipments decreased 0.4% to 8.0 million units.
Modular Form Factor Market Results
Servers in the modular form factor categories performed well in 4Q12.
There are two types of modular form factors, each with a distinct use
case. Blade servers, which are highly leveraged in enterprises'
virtualized environments, grew 3.3% year over year to $2.4 billion.
Blades now account for 16.3% of total server revenue. HP maintained the
number 1 spot in the blade server market in 4Q12 with 44.7% revenue
share; IBM and Cisco followed in second and third with 21.7% and 15.3%
revenue share, respectively.
Density Optimized servers, utilized by large datacenters, experienced
very strong demand in 4Q12. Revenue grew 66.4% year over year in 4Q12 to
$705 million as unit shipments increased 44.2% to just over 192,000
servers. Density Optimized servers now represent 4.8% of all server
revenue and 9.2% of all server shipments. Dell maintained the number 1
spot in the Density Optimized segment in 4Q12 with 50.8% revenue share.
IBM and HP finished second and third in revenue share with 12.8% and
9.1%, respectively.
"Both types of modular form factors outperformed the overall server
market, indicating customers are increasingly favoring specialization in
their server designs," said Jed
Scaramella, research manager, Enterprise
Servers. "Density Optimized servers were positively impacted by the
growth of service providers in the market. In addition to HPC, Cloud and
IT service providers favor the highly efficient and scalable design of
Density Optimized servers. Blade servers are being leveraged in
enterprises' virtualized and private cloud environments. IDC is
observing an increased interest from the market for converged systems,
which use blades as the building block. Enterprise IT organizations are
viewing converged systems as a method to simplify management and
increase their time to value."
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Top 5 Corporate Family, Worldwide Server Systems Factory
Revenue, Fourth Quarter of 2012
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(Revenues are in Millions)
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Vendor
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4Q12 Revenue
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4Q12 Market Share
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4Q11 Revenue
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4Q11 Market Share
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4Q12/4Q11 Revenue Growth
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1. IBM
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$5,343
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36.5%
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$5,180
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36.5%
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3.1%
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2. HP
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$3,626
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24.8%
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$3,747
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26.4%
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-3.2%
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3. Dell
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$2,218
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15.1%
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$2,098
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14.8%
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5.7%
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4. Oracle*
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$602
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4.1%
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$733
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5.2%
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-17.8%
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4. Fujitsu*
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$501
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3.4%
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$476
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3.4%
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5.3%
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4. Cisco*
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$480
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3.3%
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$319
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2.2%
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50.7%
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Others
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$1,869
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12.8%
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$1,641
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11.6%
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13.9%
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All Vendors
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$14,639
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100%
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$14,193
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100%
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3.1%
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IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Server Tracker, February 2013
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