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Shane Rau, IDC: Q2 2010
Worldwide PC Microprocessor Unit Shipments Rise 3.6%
August 19, 2010
Worldwide
PC microprocessor unit shipments and revenues in the second calendar
quarter of 2010 (2Q10) increased 3.6% and 6.2%, respectively, compared
to the first quarter of 2010.
The average sequential change in unit shipments between a calendar
year's first quarter and its second quarter is an increase of 1.6%. For
revenues, the average sequential change is a decrease of -2.8%. So,
these increases represent better performance than usual for a second
calendar quarter.
"Such a sequential increase in PC processor shipments alone would have
been enough to conclude that the first half was strong for the market,"
said Shane Rau director of Semiconductors: Personal Computing research
at IDC. "However, a modest rise in revenues, too, points directly to a
rise in average selling prices. System makers bought more and
higher-priced PC processors in 2Q10 than in 1Q10. Digging a little
deeper into the numbers shows that they bought more mobile processors
and more server processors, while desktop processors remained flat."
Looking at market performance by PC form factor, mobile PC processor
unit shipments rose 6.5% quarter over quarter, PC server processors rose
6.1% quarter over quarter, and desktop PC processors declined -0.1%
quarter over quarter.
2Q10 Vendor Highlights

For the overall worldwide PC
microprocessor market in 2Q10, Intel earned 80.7% unit market share, a
loss of 0.3%, while AMD earned 19.0%, a gain of 0.2%, and VIA
Technologies earned 0.3%.
In 2Q10 unit share by form factor, Intel earned 86.1% share in the
mobile PC processor segment, a loss of -1.7%. AMD finished the quarter
with 13.7%, a gain of 1.6%, and VIA earned 0.2%. In the PC
server/workstation processor segment, Intel finished with 93.5% market
share, a gain of 3.3% and AMD earned 6.5%, a loss of 3.3%. In the
desktop PC processor segment, Intel earned 72.2%, a gain of 0.5%, AMD
earned 27.3%, a loss of -0.7%, and VIA earned 0.5%.
Market Outlook
IDC's
forecast for worldwide PC processor unit growth in 2010 is 19.8%.
However, market demand for processors weakened during the second quarter
and is expected to remain weak in August. "Major OEMs cut PC build
orders with their contract manufacturers who, in turn, have cut orders
for commodity components," said Rau. "While the PC processor vendors
re-iterated their solid outlook during their most recent earnings calls,
the softness we've seen ultimately makes us concerned for end demand's
pull on processors. Likely, the second half of the year will be seasonal
given the early build for Intel's Sandy Bridge and AMD's Fusion
architecture launches, but lower than the year-over-year growth seen in
the first half of the year. 2011 remains a wildcard in terms of
sustainable unit growth." |