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Wednesday, May 12, 2010

CSR gains as NXP takes top spot in automotive infotainment silicon

NXP Semiconductors in 2009 took the top position in the global automotive infotainment semiconductor market according to market researchers iSuppli, the first time the company has held the top spot since the company began tracking the area in 2005.
NXP in 2009 posted automotive infotainment semiconductor revenue of $291 million. While this total was down 24.8 percent from $387 million in 2008, No. 2 STMicroelectronics also saw a significant fall in its revenue, declining by 37.4 percent if compared to 2008. As a result, NXP was able to displace STMicroelectronics as the world’s leading infotainment chip supplier. NXP’s share of the global market for infotainment semis amounted to 11.5 percent in 2009, while STMicroelectronics accounted for 10.9 percent. 
Maintaining its No. 3 position was Panasonic with revenue of $193 million, down 36.3 percent year-on-year, while Renesas Technology stayed in the No. 4 slot with revenue of $191 million.
The only market share gainer for the year was UK-based Cambridge Silicon Radio (CSR), which in 2009 merged with U.S. GPS and multimedia baseband provider SiRF. The combined operation pushed CSR into the No. 5 slot in 2009 with revenue of $167 million, up from 15th place in 2008.
Outside the top five, Japanese audio and FM tuner supplier ROHM stood at No.6 with annual revenue declining by less than most of its competitors to $140 million in 2009, down 9.7 percent from 2008. Positions six through 10 were dominated by Japanese semiconductor manufacturers, with the exception of Texas Instruments (TI). TI moved up one position from ninth to eighth with revenue of $80 million in 2009.
Japanese manufacturers accounted for 34 percent of global infotainment semiconductor revenue in 2009, while European-based manufacturers accounted for 32 percent. In contrast, American-based manufacturers accounted for just 11 percent of the global total in 2009.


Vehicle production troubles suppress market opportunities
“Clearly, the general market suffered badly from the automotive downturn of 2009 with overall automotive infotainment semiconductor revenue down 20.3 percent to just slightly more than $2.5 billion, compared to $3.2 billion in 2008,” said Richard Robinson, principal analyst for automotive infotainment at iSuppli. “Most companies in the supply chain posted revenue declines between 20 percent and 35 percent, with even the large established silicon players taking hits and suffering losses. Companies were impacted as vehicle production in
Japan was slashed by nearly 34 percent, while the Europe/Middle East/Africa (EMEA) region experienced an unprecedented fall in production of 23 percent. The U.S. market was also another casualty with vehicle production falling by 25 percent.”
In spite of these tough numbers, companies that had good exposure to the Chinese vehicle production bonanza of 2009 were able to keep pushing against a strong headwind in the overall market.
“With vehicle production growth up by more than 34 percent year-on-year in China in 2009, NXP was able to take advantage of this regional bubble with a comprehensive range of specialist and commodity AM/FM tuner and audio processing products, as well as a significant showing in audio amplifiers,” Robinson added. “NXP maintained its 56 percent market share of the global AM/FM tuner/audio processing market, generating more than $200 million in 2009.”

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