Fuelled by strong demand for mobile computing devices, global PC processor
shipments grew 14.3 per cent sequentially to reach record levels in the third
calendar quarter of 2007, new research reveals.
According to IDC's study
Worldwide PC Processor 3Q07 Vendor Shares, published today, the boost in
shipments helped worldwide PC microprocessor sales revenue jump 14.8 per cent to
$7.95bn in 3Q07.
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Shipments of processors designed for mobile PCs continued to lead the market,
growing 26.6 per cent in 3Q07, reflecting "considerable worldwide demand" for
mobile PCs in the second half of the year. Shipments of processors for desktop
PCs and for PC servers also fared rather well, increasing by 7.7 per cent and
4.6 per cent, respectively.
"The third quarter of 2007 was the second quarter in a row to exceed
expectations in terms of PC processor unit shipments," said Shane Rau, director
of IDC's Semiconductors: Personal Computing program.
"We attribute the market's performance to Intel's and AMD's aggressive
pricing for their new platforms, which stimulated early demand from PC OEMs
building PCs for the back-to-school buying season. However, we also believe that
real end demand is there. OEMs are passing processor savings onto consumers,
who, instead of buying cheaper systems, are purchasing more robust
configurations, partially to support Windows Vista."
IDC noted that "modest changes" in processor vendor market share belied an "
intensity of vendor competition" in the third quarter 2007. On an overall unit
basis, AMD earned 23.5 per cent market share, a gain of 0.4 per cent. Intel
earned 76.3 per cent, a loss of 0.4 per cent.
By form factor, AMD’s share in the mobile PC processor segment rose 1.9 per
cent to 18.9 per cent, and its share in the PC server processor segment grew 0.7
per cent to 13.9 per cent. Market shares changes in the desktop PC processor
segment were negligible.
The analyst firm expects strong market demand for PC processors to continue
in the fourth quarter. "Both Intel and AMD noted in their 3Q07 earnings calls
that demand remains strong," said Richard Murphy, IDC inquiry analyst.
"In fact, both companies noted how the broad-based demand is spread across
processor segments and regions of the world."
"Our attention is now focused on what 2008 will bring," added Shane Rau. "
We're conducting an investigation into the supply chain and end-systems, across
multiple component types, to consider if 1Q08 will bring the typical modest
drop-off from the fourth quarter or something different."
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