Worldwide Server Market Decelerates in Third Quarter, Exhibiting Significant Signs of Weakness for Fourth Quarter and Beyond, According to IDC
03 Dec 2008
FRAMINGHAM, Mass., December 3, 2008 – According to
IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Server Tracker, factory revenue in the worldwide
server market declined 5.2% year over year to $12.6 billion in the third
quarter of 2008 (3Q08). This is the largest quarterly revenue decline since the
fourth quarter of 2002 as technology spending slowed around the world. Server unit shipment growth of 2.8% year over year in 3Q08
represented the slowest increase in server shipments since 4Q06.
Volume systems revenue declined 7.2% year over year in the
third quarter, the first decline for this important market segment in more than
14 quarters. In the midrange, revenue for midrange enterprise servers declined
9.5% year over year while revenue for high-end enterprise servers grew 4.0%
year over year, the third consecutive quarter of growth for the segment.
"The server market experienced significant deceleration
in the third quarter with particular weakness in September. The slow down
impacted a wide range of traditional server technologies with improved demand
for blades and IBM System z notable exceptions," said Matt Eastwood, group vice
president of Enterprise Platforms at IDC. "Many OEMs experienced significant
pricing challenges in the quarter and revenue declines were experienced in all
regions except Latin America and the Middle East and Africa (MEA). Enterprise
budgets continue to face increased scrutiny as IT organizations of all types
look to run their hardware harder and defer acquisitions wherever possible."
Overall Server Market Standings, by Vendor
HP and IBM ended the third quarter in a statistical tie with
30.7% and 30.2% overall market share respectively. HP experienced a 2.0%
year-over-year revenue decline in 3Q08 while its BladeSystem business showed
continued strength. IBM's overall revenues declined 3.1% year over year despite
strong System z sales. Dell experienced a 4.3% revenue decline in the quarter
and maintained third place with 12.0% overall market share in 3Q08. Sun
maintained its fourth place position by posting a 10.9% year-over-year revenue
decline and holding 9.5% market share for the quarter.
Top-Level Server Market Findings
- Microsoft Windows server revenue was $5.1 billion in
3Q08, showing a 5.1% year-over-year revenue decline and maintaining revenue
market share at 40.8% of all server revenue in 3Q08.
- Linux servers posted a 2.5% year-over-year revenue
decline for a total of $1.8 billion in the quarter. Linux servers now represent
14.0% of all server revenue.
- Unix servers experienced an 8.4% revenue decline when
compared with 3Q07. All segments including volume, midrange enterprise, and
high-end enterprise experienced declines. In 3Q08, worldwide Unix revenues were
$3.7 billion for the quarter, representing 29.7% of quarterly server spending.
- IBM's System z servers running z/OS experienced their
third consecutive quarter of growth, increasing revenue 24.8% year over year
and holding 9.4% of all server revenue.
"In the face of the worsening economic climate, IBM was
still able to post significant growth in their mainframe business during the
quarter," said Steve Josselyn, research director for IDC's Enterprise
Computing group. "While we believe some of this is based on pent-up demand
after a lengthy refresh cycle before the introduction of the new z10 machines
late last year, there is still a large number of customers that continue to
invest in the System z platform as an integral part of their compute
infrastructure."
x86 Industry Standard Server Market Dynamics
x86 server revenue declined 6.6% year over year in 3Q08 to
$6.9 billion, which represents the largest year-over-year revenue decline for
the segment in more than 24 quarters. Shipment growth also slowed
significantly, growing just 4.0% to 1.97 million units as demand for x86
servers moderated. The top 3 x86 server OEMs (HP, Dell and IBM) all experienced
a decline in x86 factory revenue in the quarter, with HP leading the market
with 36.9% x86 revenue share and with Dell holding second place with 21.8%
revenue share.
"The uncertain future of the global economy appears to
have affected IT budgets across the board," said Daniel Harrington,
research analyst with the Enterprise Server Group. " Weakened demand for
more fully configured servers, along with intense price competition, drove x86
server revenue in the U.S. to decline 12.2% in the third quarter, the most
since 2001. Revenue declined across all regions except Latin America, which
continued to show strong growth at 12.8%."
"OEMs are being forced to become increasingly price
competitive in the x86 space, and are therefore looking for margins from other
value adds, such as software and services. Vendors that are able to offer
reliable and comprehensive infrastructure solutions, from hardware and
software, to a more complete services portfolio, are likely to be seen as a
more attractive option to risk averse end-users."
Blade Server Market Shows Strong Shipment and Revenue Growth
The server blade market decelerated for the third
consecutive quarter, with factory revenue growing 29.5% year over year.
Overall, bladed servers, including x86, EPIC, and RISC blades, captured $1.4
billion and represented 11.0% of all server market revenue in the quarter. HP
maintained the number 1 spot in the blade market with 54.7% market share and
quarterly factory revenues growing 55.5% year over year. IBM held the number 2
position in the blade server market with 22.9% share while Dell maintained the
number 3 position with 9.3% revenue share.
"Blades were the only form-factor to experience
positive growth in the quarter, with all major vendors exhibiting double-digit
growth in blade volumes," said Jed Scaramella, senior research analyst in
IDC's Enterprise Computing group. "IT customers continue to adopt blades
due to energy efficiency, serviceability, and flexibility benefits derived from
the consolidated platform."
Top 5 Corporate Family, Worldwide Server Systems
Factory Revenue, Third Quarter of 2008
(Revenues are in
Millions)
|
Vendor
|
3Q08
Revenue
|
Market
Share
|
3Q07
Revenue
|
Market
Share
|
3Q08/3Q07
Revenue
Growth
|
|
1. HP
|
$3,862
|
30.7%
|
$3,942
|
29.7%
|
-2.0%
|
|
1.
IBM
|
$3,806
|
30.2%
|
$3,929
|
29.6%
|
-3.1%
|
|
3.
Dell
|
$1,515
|
12.0%
|
$1,582
|
11.9%
|
-4.3%
|
|
4.
Sun
|
$1,192
|
9.5%
|
$1,338
|
10.1%
|
-10.9%
|
|
5.
Fujitsu/Fujitsu Siemens
|
$647
|
5.1%
|
$706
|
5.3%
|
-8.4%
|
|
Others
|
$1,562
|
12.4%
|
$1,779
|
13.4%
|
-12.2%
|
|
All Vendors
|
$12,585
|
100%
|
$13,277
|
100%
|
-5.2%
|
Source: IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Server Tracker, December 2008
IDC's Server Taxonomy
IDC's Server Taxonomy maps the eleven price bands within the
server market into three price ranges: volume servers (servers priced less than
$25,000), midrange enterprise servers ($25,000 to $499,999), and high-end
enterprise servers ($500,000 or more). The revenue data presented in this
release is stated as factory revenue for a server system. IDC presents data in
factory revenue to determine market-share position. Factory revenue represents
those dollars recognized by multi-user system and server vendors for ISS and
upgrade units sold through direct and indirect channels and includes the
following embedded server components: Frame or cabinet and all cables,
processors, memory, communications boards, operating system software, other
bundled software and initial internal and external disk shipments.
IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Server Tracker is a quantitative
tool for analyzing the global server market on a quarterly basis. The Tracker
includes quarterly shipments (both ISS and upgrades) and revenues (both
customer and factory), segmented by vendor, family, model, region, operating
system, price band, CPU type, and architecture. For more information, please
contact Hoang Nguyen at 508-935-4718 or hnguyen@idc.com.
Contact
For more information, contact:
Matt Eastwood
meastwood@idc.com
508-935-4503
Jed Scaramella
jscaramella@idc.com
508-935-4596
Daniel Harrington
dharrington@idc.com
508-988-7897
Michael Shirer
press@idc.com
508-935-4200
|