Worldwide semiconductor revenue grew 13.4% in 2018: Gartner

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Memory market drives revenue growth

Worldwide revenue totalled US$ 476.7 billion in 2018, a 13.4% increase from 2017, according to preliminary results by Gartner, Inc. Memory strengthened its position as the largest category, accounting for 34.8% of total semiconductor revenue, up from 31% in 2017.

"The largest semiconductor supplier, Samsung Electronics, increased its lead as the No. 1 vendor due to the booming DRAM market," said Andrew Norwood, vice president, analyst at "While 2018 continued to build on the growth established in 2017, the overall gains driven by memory were at half the 2017 growth rate. This is attributed to memory entering a downturn late in 2018."

The combined revenue of the top 25 semiconductor vendors increased by 16.3% during 2018 and accounted for 79.3% of the market, outperforming the rest of the market, which saw a milder 3.6% revenue increase. This is due to the concentration of the memory vendors in the top-25 ranking.

Intel's semiconductor revenue grew by 12.2% compared with 2017, driven by a combination of unit and average selling price (ASP) growth. Major memory vendors that performed strongly in 2018 include SK hynix - driven by DRAM, and Microchip Technology - due to its acquisition of The top four vendors in 2017 retained their ranking in 2018.

Top 10 Semiconductor Vendors by Revenue, Worldwide, 2018 (Millions of US Dollars)<?xml:namespace prefix = "o" ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

2018 Rank

2017 Rank

Vendor

2018 Revenue

2018 Market Share (%)

2017 Revenue

2017-2018 Growth (%)

1

1

Samsung Electronics

75854

15.9

59875

26.7

2

2

Intel

65862

13.8

58725

12.2

3

3

SK hynix

36433

7.6

26370

38.2

4

4

Micron Technology

30641

6.4

22895

33.8

5

6

Broadcom

16544

3.5

15405

7.4

6

5

Qualcomm

15380

3.2

16099

-4.5

7

7

Texas Instruments

14767

3.1

13506

9.3

8

9

Western Digital

9321

2.0

9159

1.8

9

11

ST Microelectronics

9276

1.9

8031

15.5

10

10

Semiconductors

9010

1.9

8750

3.0

Others

98648

20.7

95215

3.6

Total Market

476693

100.0

420393

13.4

Source: (January 2019)

"The current rankings may see significant change this year with the expectation that memory market conditions will weaken in 2019," said "Technology product managers must prepare for this limited growth to succeed in the semiconductor industry."

Memory vendors, for example, will need to plan for future oversupply and intense margin pressure by funding research and development on continued node transitions, emerging and new This will provide them the best cost structure as new entrants from emerge.

Nonmemory vendors must increase design-in activity with key customers that have been enduring high memory pricing. As the market for and tablets continues to saturate, application processor vendors must seek adjacent opportunities in wearables, Internet of Things (IoT) endpoints and automobiles.

In terms of semiconductor devices, memory was simultaneously the largest (35%) and highest-performing device category for 2018 with 27.2% revenue growth. This was driven by increases in ASP for DRAM for much of the year with the exception of the fourth quarter of 2018.

Within the memory segment, NAND suffered a marked slowdown with ASP declines through much of the year due to oversupply. This device category still managed to show a 6.5% revenue increase, driven by higher adoption of solid-state drives and increasing content in

The second-largest semiconductor category, application-specific-standard products, saw limited growth of 5.1% due to a stalling market combined with a tablet market that continues to decline. Leading vendors in this segment area, including and MediaTek, are aggressively expanding into adjacent markets with stronger prospects for growth, including automotive and IoT applications.

Merger and acquisition activity in 2018 was more significant for the deals that did not happen than the deals that did. Broadcom's hostile takeover attempt of failed as the stepped in, and Qualcomm's bid to secure became embroiled in the ongoing trade war with Completed deals included spinning off its NAND into Memory in June 2018 and Microchip's May 2018 acquisition of

"2019 will be a very different market from the previous two years," said "Memory has already entered a downturn, there is the looming trade war between the US and China, and mounting uncertainty about the global economy."

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First Published: Mon, January 07 2019. 15:21 IST