Skip to main content

Global Demand for Computing Servers Spiral Downward

Vendor revenue in the overall worldwide computing server market declined 4.6 percent year-over-year to $14.6 billion in the fourth quarter of 2016 (4Q16), according to the latest market study by International Data Corporation (IDC).

Server market growth has slowed in part due to maturity of the hyperscale data center growth, and from declining high-end server deployments.

In addition, the enterprise refresh cycle of 2015 had created less demand in 2016. Worldwide server shipments decreased 3.5 percent to 2.55 million units in 4Q16 when compared with the same year-ago period.

Computing Server Market Development

On a year-over-year basis, volume and mid-range system revenue decreased 3.3 percent and 6.1 percent in 4Q16 to $11.2 billion and $1.4 billion, respectively.

Server demand across the enterprise market was soft for the quarter. Meanwhile, 4Q16 demand for high-end systems experienced a year-over-year revenue decline of 10.7 percent to $2.0 billion. IDC expects continued long-term secular declines in high-end system revenue.

"The server market suffered another difficult quarter as most segments declined, including hyperscale deployments, suggesting that the weakness previously seen is more systemic," said Kuba Stolarski, research director at IDC.

According to the IDC assessment, some public cloud data center deployments are being delayed, and overall levels of deployment and refresh may slow down even through the long term as hyperscalers continue to evaluate their hardware provisioning criteria.

On the enterprise side, IDC analysts are seeing ongoing weakness as companies struggle to decide whether to deploy workloads on premises or off, and continue to consolidate existing workloads on fewer servers.

Regionally, Asia-Pacific (excluding Japan) and Japan experienced the only positive revenue growth with 4Q16 year-over-year increases of 8.1 percent and 3.3 percent, respectively. These were the same two regions that experienced the only positive growth in 3Q16 as well.

Within APeJ, China drove overall growth by increasing its revenue 18.8 percent to $2.7 billion. All other regions continued to decline. Latin America experienced a relatively small decline of 1.1 percent. The United States declined 7.6 percent year over year.

Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) declined 12.9 percent, with all sub-regions in decline: Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) declined 25 percent, Western Europe declined 11.8 percent, and Middle East and Africa (MEA) declined 7.5 percent. Canada declined by 15.1 percenrt year over year. Of all regions, the U.S. remains the largest regional market with 39.2 percent of worldwide server vendor revenue.

Outlook for Server Market Growth

Demand for x86 servers weakened in 4Q16 with revenues decreasing 1.9 percent year over year in the quarter to $12.2 billion worldwide, while unit shipments decreased 3.3 percent to 2.53 million servers.

That said, x86 average selling prices (ASPs) increased by 1.5 percent year over year and 2.4 percent sequentially. HPE led the x86 server market with 26.5 percent revenue share based on a year-over-year decline of 13 percent in x86 revenue.

Non-x86 servers experienced a revenue decline of 16.7 percent year over year to $2.4 billion, representing 16.2 percent of quarterly server revenue. IBM leads the segment with 75.4 percent revenue share despite a 17.1 percent year-over-year revenue decline.

IDC also continued to track minimal revenue from ARM-based server sales in 4Q16; ARM sales have yet to make an impact on the server market.

Popular posts from this blog

Global Rise of Domestic Payment Ecosystems

Alternative Payment Methods (APMs) – comprising digital wallets, instant payments, and QR payment systems – are experiencing explosive growth that's reshaping the global financial services marketplace. According to the latest worldwide market study by ABI Research , the combined global transaction value for APMs is projected to reach $142 trillion by 2030. What's particularly fascinating is the underlying driver behind this trend: a growing desire for financial sovereignty, with nations developing domestic payment ecosystems rather than remaining dependent on international financial networks. Payment Ecosystem Market Development In 2024, approximately 45 percent of the global population used digital wallets – a remarkable adoption rate for a technology that barely existed a decade ago. China leads this transition, with 95 percent of its population using WeChat's payment functionality. WeChat exemplifies the "super app" phenomenon, where payment capabilities are in...