| HPC Server Market Declined 11.6% in 2009, Return to Growth Expected in 2010, According to IDC |
| HARD / IT HARDWARE / Wednesday, 24 March 2010 16:57 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
FRAMINGHAM, Mass., March 24, 2010 – Factory revenue for the high performance computing (HPC) technical server market declined by 11.6% in 2009 to $8.6 billion, down from $9.7 billion in 2008, according to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide High-Performance Technical Server QView. Unit shipments dropped 40% year over year during the recession year. IBM and HP ended the year in a statistical tie* with 29.3% and 28.6% of overall factory revenue market share respectively. A bright spot was the "Supercomputers" segment for HPC systems priced at $500,000 and up, which grew by 25% to reach $3.4 billion during the difficult year. Fueled by multiple transactions in the $100 million range, the top bracket in this segment, for HPC systems priced above $3 million, grew even faster, expanding by a whopping 65% to reach $1.0 billion. At the other end of the price spectrum, revenue from "Workgroup" HPC systems priced below $100,000 slid 33% to $1.7 billion as buyers delayed or canceled some planned acquisitions in this segment that is characterized by purchases based on shorter sales cycles and more discretionary spending. "IDC expects the HPC technical server market to begin recovering from the impact of the global economic recession in early-2010, with year-over-year growth projected at 5% to 7%. And just as the recession affected HPC market segments unequally, so too will the recovery," said Earl Joseph, program vice president for HPC. "Many firms have been so battered that they will maintain capex restrictions even in mission-critical areas such as HPC." "On the other hand, HPC is such an entrenched part of the R&D process in leading oil and gas companies, in government, and in some entertainment and consumer product firms, that budget cuts during the recession have been rare and HPC growth plans are already in place," said Jie Wu, research director for Technical Computing. "Government and university spending, which together make up about 65% of all HPC server revenue, declined less than the overall market in 2009 and with some help from the U.S. Government stimulus funding should remain another bright spot during the recovery." Vendor Highlights
Worldwide Technical Computing Hardware Server, 2009 Top 5 Vendor Revenue and Market Share (revenues in millions)
Source: IDC Worldwide Technical Computing QView, February 2010. * Note: IDC declares a statistical tie in the worldwide server market when there is less than one percent difference in the factory revenues of two or more vendors. The IDC Worldwide High-Performance Technical Server QView presents the HPC market from various perspectives, including by competitive segment, vendor, cluster versus noncluster, geography, and operating system. It also contains detailed revenue and shipment information by HPC model. For more information about the IDC Worldwide High Performance Technical Server QView, please contact Jie Wu at jwu@idc.com. Contact For more information, contact:Jie Wu jwu@idc.com 781-883-2488 Michael Shirer press@idc.com 508-935-4200 More from this author: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Last Updated on Wednesday, 24 March 2010 16:58 |