News
Bosch Grabs 20% of Worldwide Sensor Sales in 2014 while ST Falls to Fourth
Published: May 02,2015According to IC Insights’ new report, stiff competition in sensors for high-volume design wins and a recovery in actuator growth shuffled the ranking of suppliers in the $9.2 billion market for sensors and actuators in 2014. The new report says the overall trend in sensors and actuators is for the largest suppliers to keep getting bigger, gaining marketshare because more high-volume applications—such as smartphones and the huge potential of the Internet of Things (IoT)—and automotive systems require well-established track records for quality, long-term reliability, and on-time delivery of semiconductors.
Automotive IC Marketshare Seen Rising to 10% by 2026: IC Insights Says
According to the IC Insights, automotive IC sales expected to post average annual growth of 13.4%; Communications and Computer segments remain largest applications...
Memory Upswing Returns, New Record High Expected in 2022
Fueled by economic recovery and the transition to a digital economy, memory IC sales are forecast to reach $180.4 billion in 2022, exceeding the previous record high set in 2018...
Sensor leader Robert Bosch in Germany extended its lead in this market with a 16% sales increase in 2014 to nearly $1.2 billion. The German company became the first sensor maker to reach $1.0 billion in 2013 when its sales climbed 29%, reflecting continued strong growth in its automotive base and expansion into high-volume consumer and mobile applications. Bosch’s marketshare in sensor-only sales grew to 20% in 2014 from 18% in 2013 and 15% in 2012, according to the 10th edition of IC Insights’ annual O-S-D Report.
Meanwhile, STMicroelectronics saw its sensor/actuator sales volume fall 19% in 2014 to $630 million, which caused it to drop to fourth place among the market’s top suppliers from second in 2013. ST’s drop was partly caused by marketshare gains by Bosch and U.S.-based InvenSense, which climbed from 14th in 2013 to ninth in the 2014 sensor/actuator ranking with a 33% increase in sensor sales to $332 million last year. Bosch and InvenSense sensors—which are made with microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) technology—have knocked ST’s MEMS-based sensors from a number of high-volume smartphones, including Apple’s newest iPhone handsets.
ST’s drop in sensor revenues and modest sales increases in MEMS-based actuators at Texas Instruments (micro-mirror devices for digital projectors and displays) and Hewlett-Packard (mostly inkjet-printer nozzle devices) moved TI and HP up one position in IC Insights’ 2014 ranking to second and third place, respectively. Infineon remained in fifth place in the sensors/actuator ranking with an 8% sales increase to $520 million last year. The 2015 O-S-D Report provides top 10 rankings of suppliers in sensors/actuators, optoelectronics, and discrete semiconductors in addition to a top 30 O-S-D list of companies, based on combined revenue in optoelectronics, sensors/actuators and discretes.
The report forecasts worldwide sensor sales to increase 7% in 2015 to reach a record-high $6.1 billion after growing 5% in 2014 to $5.7 billion and rising just 3% in 2013. Total actuator sales are expected to increase 7% in 2015 to $3.7 billion, which will tie the record high set in 2011. Actuator sales fell 10% in 2012 and dropped another 4% in 2013 before recovering in 2014 with a 7% increase to $3.5 billion.
MEMS technology was used in about 34% of the 11.1 billion sensors shipped in 2014 and essentially all of the 999 million actuators sold last year. Tiny MEMS structures are used in these devices to perform transducer functions (i.e., detecting and measuring changes around sensors for inputs in electronic systems, and initiating physical actions in actuators from electronic signals).
CTIMES loves to interact with the global technology related companies and individuals, you can deliver your products information or share industrial intelligence. Please email us to en@ctimes.com.tw
1443 viewed