May  16, 2008
    
  Riding the momentum of continued strong demand growth for mobile handsets,  sales of semiconductors for wireless products rose at a faster pace than the  overall chip market in 2007, according to iSuppli Corp.
  
  The global wireless semiconductor market generated $29.5 billion in revenue in  2007, up 7.6 percent from $27.4 billion in 2006. These figures consist of  revenue from sales of application-specific semiconductors—excluding memory—for  wireless applications, including mobile handsets, wireless infrastructure  equipment, wireless LANs and connectivity products.
  
  In contrast, the global market for all kinds of semiconductors grew by only 3.3  percent during the same period.
  
  Worldwide mobile handset shipments amounted to 1.15 billion units in 2007,  rising by a robust 16.1 percent from 990 million in 2006. This helped keep the  wireless semiconductor market on a high growth track in 2007, with six of the  Top-10 suppliers achieving double-digit increases in revenue for the year.
  Qualcomm the undisputed leader
  “iSuppli in mid 2007 reported that Qualcomm Inc. had usurped Texas  Instruments Inc. as the world’s leading supplier of semiconductors for wireless  applications during the initial three months of 2007, the first time this had  occurred on a quarterly basis,” said Francis Sideco, Senior Analyst, wireless  communications for iSuppli. “Qualcomm held onto the lead for the entire year of  2007.”
  
  Qualcomm handily outgrew the overall wireless semiconductor market, with its  revenue in this segment rising by 24.1 percent. The company shrugged off its  legal woes and benefitted from strong demand for its EvDO and WCDMA/HSPA chips.  Company market share rose to 19.1 percent in 2007, up from 16.5 percent in  2006.
  
  Texas Instruments’ performance in 2007 was not as strong as Qualcomm’s, with  the company’s share declining to 16.7 percent, down from 19.4 percent in 2006.  Company revenue declined by 7.7 percent in 2007.
  
  “Texas Instruments’ results were influenced by a confluence of events in  2007—especially occurrences in the market for high-end 3G semiconductors,”  Sideco said. “The year 2007 brought a market slowdown in Western   Europe, where Texas Instruments’ customers have a large presence.  This, combined with Ericsson Mobile Platform’s (EMP’s) rising use of  STMicroelectronics parts in some of its 3G digital baseband platforms,  conspired to diminish Texas Instruments’ market share in 2007,” Sideco said.
  
  STMicroelectronics surged to the No.-3 ranking in 2007, up from fifth in 2006,  due to a 14.4 percent rise in revenue. The company’s strong performance was due  in part to the previously mentioned usage of its 3G digital baseband chips by  EMP. Infineon posted an impressive 54.3 percent increase in revenue, allowing  it to move to No. 4 in 2007, up from No. 8 in 2006.
  
  Consolidation pros and cons
  iSuppli’s 2007 rankings illustrate the consolidation of market demand among  the top semiconductor suppliers. The wireless semiconductor market is  structuring itself to match the concentration of market share among the Top-5  mobile handset OEMs.
  
  “Scale is sine qua non to compete in today’s wireless semiconductor market,”  Sideco said. “Chip suppliers need at least $1 billion in revenue to even sit at  the wireless table. However, scale goes beyond revenue and extends into having  sufficient resources to support a broad and cutting-edge product portfolio,  which must include single chip and reference platform solutions.”
  
  Wireless semiconductor suppliers with annual revenue greater than $1 billion  increased their collective share of the market to 62 percent in 2007, up from  51 percent in 2006. Sideco projects this trend will continue in 2008.

 
             
             
             
                 
                    
                 
                    
                
 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                