Worldwide Server Market Contracts Sharply in Fourth Quarter as Market Revenues Decline to $53.3 Billion in 2008, According to IDC
25 Feb 2009
FRAMINGHAM, Mass., February 25, 2009 – According to
IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Server Tracker, factory revenue in the worldwide
server market declined 14.0% year-over-year to $13.5 billion in the fourth
quarter of 2008 (4Q08), marking the second consecutive quarter of market
decline. Worldwide server unit
shipments declined 12.0% in 4Q08 when compared with the year-ago period. For
the full year 2008, worldwide server revenue declined 3.3% to $53.3 billion,
while worldwide unit shipments grew 2.0% to 8.1 million units. This is the
first time the server market has exceeded 8.0 million units in a calendar year,
reflecting continued demand for new physical servers even as virtualization
makes significant gains in the enterprise.
Volume systems
experienced the sharpest impact, with a year-over-year revenue decline of
16.8%. Midrange enterprise demand weakened with a year-over-year decline of
14.5% while the high-end enterprise segment saw a revenue decline of 7.5% when
compared to 4Q07. This is the first time since 2002 that all three server
segments have experienced a year-over-year revenue decline in the same quarter,
illustrating the immediate impact of the economic downturn, which worsened in
the same quarter.
"The server market experienced its sharpest decline
since the middle of the dot-com slowdown nearly seven years ago. All server
vendors, geographies, and technology segments were impacted significantly as
the global recession gained momentum and market conditions weakened as the
quarter progressed," said Matthew Eastwood, group vice president of IDC's Enterprise
Platforms Group. "It now appears the slowdown will worsen before any
improvement is seen in late 2009 or early 2010. In the near term, IT customers
will increasingly look for IT optimization projects with strong ROI potential
and extend virtualization, consolidation, and migration programs in order to
lower capital and operational costs while improving efficiencies."
Overall Server Market Standings, by Vendor
All of the top five server vendors saw year-over-year
declines in their quarterly server revenue and in their annual server revenue –
the first time this has happened since first quarter of 2002. IBM held onto its
number 1 spot in the worldwide server systems market with 36.3% market share in
factory revenue for 4Q08, as its revenue declined 15.0% year over year.
Although IBM experienced significant weakness in System x, demand for
power-based systems improved in the quarter. HP maintained the number 2 spot
with 29.0% share for the quarter as its revenue declined 10.1% compared to
4Q07. HP was helped by a relatively strong October during its fiscal year end.
Dell maintained third place with 10.6% factory revenue market share in 4Q08.
Dell experienced a 9.9% revenue decline compared with 4Q07, while fourth place
Sun experienced a year-over-year revenue decline of 14.1% in 4Q08 to 9.3%
market share. Fujitsu/Fujitsu-Siemens, experienced a 14.9% decline in factory
revenue holding 4.2% revenue share in 4Q08.
Top Server Market Findings
- Unix servers experienced 6.2% revenue decline when
compared with 4Q07. Worldwide Unix revenues were $4.9 billion for the quarter,
representing 36.2% of quarterly server spending and reflecting continued IT
investment in this server market segment.
- Microsoft Windows server demand was impacted by the
slowing x86 market as hardware revenue declined 17.8% and unit shipments
declined 10.0% year over year. Quarterly revenue of $4.8 billion for Windows
servers represented 35.3% of overall quarterly factory revenue.
- Linux server demand also weakened in 4Q08 with revenue
declining 7.0% year over year to $1.8 billion. Linux servers now represent
13.6% of all server revenue, up more than 1.0 points over 4Q07.
"While Unix server revenue declined in the fourth
quarter, Unix server share of 36% of quarterly server-market revenue compares
well with the year-ago quarter, when Unix server revenue accounted for 33% of
quarterly revenue," said Jean S. Bozman, research vice president, IDC
Enterprise Platforms Group. "So, while actual revenue was lower this time
around ($4.9 billion in 4Q08 vs. $5.2 billion in 4Q07), the share of total
revenue shows continued investment in Unix servers, where customers have
invested so deeply over the years to support mission-critical workloads."
x86 Industry Standard Server Market Dynamics
The x86 server market decelerated sharply in 4Q08, with
factory revenues declining 17.0% in the quarter to $6.5 billion worldwide as
unit shipments declined 11.7% to 1.8 million servers. Sun was the only top 5
server vendor to experience positive x86 server revenue growth in the quarter
– growing factory revenue 21.3% – and
gaining x86 market share in the process. HP led the market with 38.2% revenue
share and Dell retained second place securing 21.9% revenue share. For the full
year 2008, worldwide x86 server revenue declined 5.3% to $27.8 billion, while
worldwide x86 unit shipments grew 2.8% to 7.7 million units.
Bladed Server Market Shows Strong Shipment and Revenue Growth
Although the blade market experienced positive growth in the
quarter, the segment decelerated sharply, with factory revenue increasing 16.1%
year over year on shipment growth of 12.1% compared to 4Q07. Overall, bladed
servers, including x86, EPIC, and RISC blades, accounted for $1.4 billion in
the fourth quarter, representing 10.4% of quarterly server market revenue. More
than 85% of all blade revenue is driven by x86 systems where blades now
represent 18.5% of all x86 server revenue. HP maintained the number 1 spot in
the server blade market in 4Q08 with 54.8% revenue share and IBM finished with
21.7% revenue share. Sun, Dell, and Fujitsu/Fujitsu-Siemens all significantly
outperformed the market with year-over-year revenue growth of more than 60%
respectively. For the full year 2008, worldwide blade server revenue grew 33.3%
year over year to $5.4 billion.
"While the x86 market declined double digits, blades
remained a bright spot as the only section of the market showing positive unit
growth, gaining 8.8% over those shipped in the fourth quarter of 2007," said
Dan Harrington, research analyst, IDC's Enterprise Platforms Group. "End
users continue to invest in blades as an attractive option due to their TCO
advantages and energy efficiency benefits."
Top 5 Corporate Family, Worldwide Server Systems Factory Revenue, Fourth Quarter of 2008
(Revenues are in
Millions)
|
Vendor
|
4Q08 Revenue
|
4Q08 Market Share
|
4Q07 Revenue
|
4Q07 Market Share
|
4Q08/4Q07 Revenue Growth
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1. IBM
|
$4,895
|
36.3%
|
$5,757
|
36.7%
|
-15.0%
|
|
2. Hewlett-Packard
|
$3,914
|
29.0%
|
$4,355
|
27.8%
|
-10.1%
|
|
3. Dell
|
$1,424
|
10.6%
|
$1,580
|
10.1%
|
-9.9%
|
|
4. Sun
|
$1,252
|
9.3%
|
$1,458
|
9.3%
|
-14.1%
|
|
5. Fujitsu/FSC
|
$567
|
4.2%
|
$666
|
4.3%
|
-14.9%
|
|
Others
|
$1,422
|
10.6%
|
$1,858
|
11.9%
|
-23.5%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
All Vendors
|
$13,475
|
100.0%
|
$15,674
|
100.0%
|
-14.0%
|
IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Server Tracker, February 2009
Top 5 Corporate Family, Worldwide Server Systems Factory Revenue, Full Year 2008
(Revenues are in
Millions)
|
Vendor
|
2008 Revenue
|
2008 Market Share
|
2007 Revenue
|
2007 Market Share
|
2008/2007 Revenue Growth
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1. IBM
|
$16,988
|
31.9%
|
$17,336
|
31.4%
|
-2.0%
|
|
2. HP
|
$15,751
|
29.5%
|
$16,041
|
29.1%
|
-1.8%
|
|
3. Dell
|
$6,199
|
11.6%
|
$6,261
|
11.4%
|
-1.0%
|
|
4. Sun
|
$5,377
|
10.1%
|
$5,868
|
10.6%
|
-8.4%
|
|
5. Fujitsu/FSC
|
$2,566
|
4.8%
|
$2,676
|
4.9%
|
-4.1%
|
|
Others
|
$6,451
|
12.1%
|
$6,949
|
12.6%
|
-7.2%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
All Vendors
|
$53,332
|
100.0%
|
$55,130
|
100.0%
|
-3.3%
|
IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Server Tracker, February 2009
IDC's Server Taxonomy
IDC's Server Taxonomy maps the eleven price bands within the
server market into three price ranges: volume servers, midrange enterprise
servers and high-end enterprise servers. 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
Dan Harrington
dharrington@idc.com
508-988-7897
Michael Shirer
press@idc.com
508-935-4200
|