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News Article

ST, Freescale and AMD come up short

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With the overall semiconductor market decline, the number of vendors that declined among the top 25 outnumbered those that grew.

Total worldwide semiconductor revenues reached $299.9 billion in 2012, down 2.6 percent from 2011, according to Gartner, Inc.

Gartner says the top 25 semiconductor vendors' revenue declined slightly faster, at 2.8 percent, than the industry as a whole.

This accounted for almost the same portion of the industry's total revenue - 68.9 percent in 2012, compared with 69 percent in 2011.

"The normal drivers of semiconductor industry growth - the computing, wireless, consumer electronics and automotive electronics sectors - all suffered serious disruption in 2012," says Steve Ohr, research director at Gartner.

"Even the industrial/medical, wired communications and military/aerospace sectors ordinarily less affected by changes in consumer sentiment suffered severe declines in semiconductor consumption. Excess inventory levels also remained a growth inhibitor."

Intel recorded a 3.1 percent revenue decline due to falls in PC shipments. However, it retained the No. 1 market share position for the 21st year in a row. Intel's share was 16.4 percent in 2012, down from 16.5 percent in 2011.

Table 1. Top 10 Semiconductor Vendors by Revenue, Worldwide, 2012 (Millions of Dollars)

 

Source: Gartner (April 2013)

Samsung, the No. 2 vendor, was held back by weak DRAM growth in 2012, as well as a dilution of the NAND flash market, although its overall revenue increased from smartphone application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) and application-specific standard products (ASSPs).

Qualcomm's semiconductor revenue increased 31.8 percent in 2012 to $13.2 billion. The company climbed from No. 6 in 2011 to No. 3 and now trails only Intel and Samsung. Qualcomm was the fastest-growing semiconductor company in the top 25 and continues to benefit from its leading position in wireless semiconductors.

Texas Instruments retained its fourth-place ranking, although Toshiba slipped to fifth place in semiconductor shipments.

Vendor Relative Industry Performance

Market share tables by themselves give a good indication of which vendors did well or badly during a year, but they do not tell the whole story. More often than not, a strong or weak performance by a vendor is a result of the overall market growth of the device areas that the vendor participates in.

Gartner's Relative Industry Performance (RIP) index measures the difference between industry-specific growth for a company and actual growth, showing which are transforming their businesses by growing share or moving into new markets.

Market leaders in Gartner's Relative Industry Performance index include Qualcomm (which grew 18.2 percent better than expected). The only other company to exceed expectation by more than 10 percent was NXP.

On the other hand, three companies underperformed expectations by more than 10 percent: Freescale, STMicroelectronics and AMD.

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