Global PC microprocessor shipments grew 8.5 per cent in the fourth quarter of
2007 to reach record levels, fuelled primarily by strong demand for servers,
according to IDC.
The analyst firm said that growth in overall unit shipments and stable
average selling prices stimulated market revenue to grow 9.6 per cent
sequentially to $8.7bn.
Shipments of processors designed for PC servers stood out in the quarter,
growing 17 per cent sequentially.
Shipments of processors for mobile PCs grew 10.3 per cent, while processors
for desktop PCs grew 6.5 per cent.
IDC analysis also revealed that, within each form factor, the percentage of
high-end and mainstream processors grew at the expense of low-end processors.
For example, in the desktop processor segment, high-end and mainstream
processors represented 87.1 per cent of processors shipped in the fourth
quarter, up from 84.6 per cent in the third quarter.
"Overall market pricing was very stable in the quarter," said Shane Rau,
director of semiconductors and personal computing research at IDC.
"Since server and mobile processors carry a premium over desktop processors,
and grew more than desktop processors, they buoyed the market average price.
"The fact that the high-end and mainstream segments within all form factor
segments grew faster than the value segments kept pricing even firmer."
IDC attributed this to the aggressive pricing at which suppliers introduced
new products in the second quarter, combined with the demand for more robust PC
configurations necessary to support Windows Vista.
As the year progressed into the fourth quarter, the pricing drew in more
buyers who wanted relatively high-end products to support Vista.
For the full year 2007, total worldwide PC processor shipments grew 12.6 per
cent compared to 2006. Total revenues grew 1.7 per cent to $30.55bn.
Processor vendor shares in the fourth quarter did not change significantly
from those in the third quarter.
On an overall unit basis,
Intel earned
76.7 per cent market share, a gain of 0.4 per cent, while
AMD earned 23.1
per cent, a loss of 0.4 per cent.
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