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IDC Report: Semiconductor Market to Grow by 17.3% in 2021, Overcapacity by 2023 (expects 34% revenue growth from consoles)

cormack12

Gold Member
Source: https://www.tomshardware.com/uk/news/idc-report-semiconductor-market-growth-2021-overcapacity-2023

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IDC yesterday published a report on the health and expectations of the semiconductor market, noting an expected growth of 17.3% for the current calendar year. The forecast beats the historical growth of 10.3% registered for 2020, which saw overwhelming demand for semiconductors from almost all related industries due to the COVID-19 pandemic.


The report indicates that foundry capacity throughout 2021 is allocated at nearly 100%, albeit issues remain from back-end manufacturing and materials procurement. By mid-2022, supply should return to normal, following production capacity expansions coming online. IDC expects this growth to be driven by mobile phones, notebooks, servers, automotive, smart home, gaming, wearables, and Wi-Fi access points.

Another element of the report is cause for trouble however: IDC forecasts memory price increases as well, driven by increased demand and mounting capacities for consumer electronics (larger internal storage and RAM, alongside the transition from 4G phones to 5G and its related consumption increase are partly responsible).

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IDC points out that most revenue growth will be led by 5G semiconductor revenues (a whopping 128% increase). Mobile phone semiconductors are expected to grow by 28.5%. Game consoles (34%), smart home (20%), and wearables (21%) will join the automotive semiconductor revenue increase (expected 22.8%) as shortages are mitigated towards the end of the year and throughout 2022. Notebook semiconductor revenues are expected to grow by a more constrained 11.8%, while X86 server semi revenues will increase by 24.6%.
 
Let's hope they are right, GPU prices are ass.

Even when new production capacity comes online, I can't see AMD and NVidia adjusting down prices to pass the savings on to consumers. They'll keep the prices high and post record profits instead.

Intel is the wild card and really the only hope for putting pressure on AMD and NVidia to drop GPU prices provided their consumer desktop cards are performance competitive.... but then again... it's intel.
 
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