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London, 4 December, 2009 – According to IDC’s EMEA Quarterly Server Tracker, EMEA server revenue in 3Q09 reached $2.9 billion, a decline of 25.7% year on year, with nearly half a million units shipped, 24.6% less than in the same quarter of 2008. Sequentially, revenue and units experienced growth of 1.9% and 8.4%, respectively, both measures exhibiting encouraging signs that the worst may be over in what has been the toughest server market environment since IDC records began. This quarter was the first time the EMEA server market posted sequential revenue growth since 4Q08.
By subregion, the Middle East and Africa (MEA) reached a double-digit revenue market share for the third consecutive quarter, with 11.7% of total revenue, while Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), slightly recovered quarter on quarter, but continued to have a lower market share than in 2008, with 10% of the total revenue. The figures confirm that market demand is growing in the Middle East and Africa while Central and Eastern Europe is taking longer to recover. Western European revenue accounted for 78.3% of the total EMEA sales.
Market momentum for x86 servers continued unabated, with revenue performance better than non-x86 servers. x86 revenue was down 21.3% annually and up 16.7% sequentially, with units up 9.6%. x86 revenue reached $1.7 billion, while non-x86 sales totaled $1.2 billion. Non-x86 revenue was down both annually and sequentially. Year on year, non-x86 revenue was down by 31.3%, while sequentially revenue was down by 14%. Shipments slumped, decreasing 49.5% in 3Q09 on 3Q08, confirming that non-x86 ASVs remain the highest in the market by a big margin. In terms of units, only 2.7% of all the servers shipped in EMEA were non-x86.
By server class, volume servers were again the main market engine with $1.7 billion, or 59.1% of the total EMEA revenue. Midrange servers, the majority of which belong to the RISC segment, suffered the sharpest decline of all sub-segments in 3Q09, 34.6% down annually, with less than $400 million in sales. High-end servers also declined by 30.2% year on year after surpassing $800 million in EMEA in 3Q09.
”Overall, the EMEA server market environment remains challenging despite better than expected performance in the larger countries such as the U.K., Germany, Spain, and to a lesser extent Russia,” said Nathaniel Martinez, director of IDC European Systems and Infrastructure Solutions. “Platform migrations, consolidation projects and datacenter rejuvenation investments are bringing some activity to the market place.
”Enterprise customers have slowly re-initiated server refreshments, either because of specific vendor roadmaps or simply to boost the flexibility and efficiency of the IT infrastructure, to increase their competitive edge in a toughening environment. The recent technology developments in x86 microprocessors helped drive demand in 3Q09, and 2010 will be a promising year in that area,” said Beatriz Valle, IDC analyst for European Systems and Infrastructures Solutions. “The sequential quarterly revenue growth is very subdued, but server vendors remain hopeful that things will pick up in the fourth quarter, which is traditionally strong in the corporate space due to end-of-year budget renewals. Fourth-quarter performance will be critical to measure where the market is heading in the medium term.”
Blade Market Dynamics
“The blade segment has been less impacted by the current market woes, as progress in blade technologies accelerates innovation in both the x86 and the non-x86 business segments,” said Giorgio Nebuloni, senior research analyst with IDC European Systems and Infrastructure Solutions. “Blades represented 16% of the x86 units, down from 16.3% in 2Q09, but thanks to their growing ASVs blade revenue was down only 6% year on year. IDC expects this product segment to see positive growth already in 4Q09, as new, integrated technology offerings relying on the blade platform see a good uptake. In this respect, non-x86 blades ($40.5 million in revenue in 3Q09, up 6% year on year) will become increasingly crucial, bringing Unix environments onto blade architectures.”
CEMA Highlights
“In the CEMA region, revenue was down 35.3% on the year and up 8.3% on the quarter, with units down 35.7% annually and up 18% quarterly. The x86 market was the engine behind quarterly growth, with 59.3% of total revenue and 97.5% of total shipments in 3Q09. But demand for industry standard servers varies by subregion, with 44.2% of total revenue in MEA belonging to the non-x86 market, while just 36.6% of total sales in CEE were related to the non-x86 business,” said IDC CEMA Systems Research Director Stefania Lorenz.
Market Highlights
Vendor Highlights
Top 5 Vendors, EMEA Server Factory Revenue, Third Quarter of 2009, Revenue in Millions
| Vendor | 3Q08 Revenue | 3Q08 Share | 3Q09 Revenue | 3Q09 Share | 3Q09/3Q08 Revenue Growth |
| HP |
$1,577 |
39.4% |
$1,198.5 |
40.3% |
-24.0% |
| IBM |
$1,094 |
27.3% |
$905.0 |
30.4% |
-17.3% |
| Dell |
$379 |
9.5% |
$290.3 |
9.8% |
-23.4% |
| Sun |
$415 |
10.4% |
$241.7 |
8.1% |
-41.8% |
| Fujitsu |
$274 |
6.8% |
$183.5 |
6.2% |
-33.1% |
| Other |
$265 |
6.6% |
$155.1 |
5.2% |
-41.5% |
| Total Market |
$4,004 |
100.0% |
$2,974.1 |
100.0% |
-25.7% |
Source: IDC’s EMEA Quarterly Server Tracker, December 2009
IDC’s EMEA Quarterly Server Tracker is a quantitative tool for analyzing the server market on a quarterly basis. The tracker includes quarterly shipments (both ISS and upgrades) and revenues (both customer and factory), segmented by vendor, family, model, region, country, operating system, price band, CPU type, and architecture.
An interesting article talking about server sales, I think we’ll see shipments increase whether it’s refreshing the server estate to reduce the energy and support costs, or through new investments and projects. Interestingly I wonder how much of this demand will be driven by integration and dis-integration projects with all the mergers and acquisitions that have been happening over the last year or so.
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