Intel finally sees some positive developments during the first three months of the year, but worries persist.
The good news came from the stabilisation of Intel’s PC business, as well as the data centre group which continued to show strong gains. Likewise, its new Internet of things business unit, while small, still had strong revenues gains.
However, Intel officials had a mixed bag when it comes to the important mobile chip business. The chip maker’s Mobile and Communications Group – which includes silicon for smartphones and tablets – generated revenues of $156 million (£93m), a 61 percent drop over the same period in 2013, though part of that could be attributable to the new way Intel is reporting its financial numbers.
The result of all this was a quarter in which the world’s largest chip maker made $1.9 billion (£1.1bn) on revenues of $12.8 billion (£7.6bn), the company reported 15 April. The net income was down 5 percent over the same period last year, while revenues were up slightly from the $12.6 billion (£7.5bn) in the first quarter of 2013.
The company expects revenues for the second quarter to hit about $13 billion (£7.8bn), a 2 percent increase over the first three months.
Intel still gets the bulk of its revenues – $7.9 billion (£4.7bn) in the first quarter – from its PC Client Group, which has been troublesome for the company over the past few years, as PC sales worldwide have continued to tumble due to the growing popularity of tablets and smartphones. However, the first-quarter revenues numbers for the PC business were down only 1 percent.
Krzanich and CFO Stacy Smith said Microsoft ending support for the creaky Windows XP operating system helped force businesses and consumers to refresh their systems – a move that analysts with Gartner and IDC both cited as helping slow the decline of the PC market in the first quarter – though the CEO said there also were other factors. Those include new form factors being pushed by Intel and OEMs, such as 2-in-1 convertible systems, falling prices of new systems and an aging PC installed base.
“So it’s a combination of factors that’s really driving the stabilisation” of the PC market, Krzanich said.
It’s been the contraction of the PC market that has driven Intel and other tech vendors to pursue other growth markets. Intel officials hit a lot of those topics – from mobile devices to the Internet of things (IoT) – earlier this month at their Intel Developer Forum in China.
“This is our strategy in action,” he said in a conference call with journalists and analysts to discuss the financial numbers. “If it computes, it runs best on the Intel Architecture.”
During the 15 April5 call, Krzanich and Smith noted gains in some of these other areas, such as Intel’s new IoT business unit, which saw revenues jump 32 percent over the first quarter of last year. However, right now it has a marginal impact over the company’s bottom line, with revenues reaching $482 million (£288m). Officials expect that to grow, fuelled by the company’s new small, low-power Quark processors, designed for the IoT and wearable devices.
The Data Center Group, which officials had said had underperformed in some areas last year, saw revenue gains of 11 percent, hitting $3.1 billion (£1.8bn), due in part of the vendor’s ability to sell chips into servers used in cloud and hyperscale environments. Officials earlier this year said they expected the data centre business to rebound this year as the global economy improved and organisations began embracing Intel’s Xeon server chip portfolio, which was refreshed in 2013 and earlier this year.
However, it’s the mobile chip space – dominated by systems-on-a-chip (SoCs) designed by ARM and made by various manufacturing partners, including Qualcomm, the top mobile chip maker – that Intel has been focusing much of its efforts in over the past several years. The company has been improving the performance of its chips while driving down their power consumption in hopes of challenging ARM in the all-important market.
The company’s processors also support not only Windows, but also Google’s Android and Chrome OSes, and this year Intel is on track to launch 14-nanometer mobile chips, like the Atom “Braswell” SoC for PCs and convertible systems, and “Cherry Trail” for tablets. Both will succeed current 22nm “Bay Trail” chips.
“Intel must pick up the pace for its tablet sales to successfully achieve this goal and its next Atom chip, Cherry Trail, which will succeed the firm’s Bay Trail chip when it becomes available in 2H14, will be a critical part of this strategy,” Stephen Belanger, an analyst with Technology Business Research, said in a research note. “Cherry Trail will be used in tablets and low-end PCs, and the chip’s 14 nm manufacturing process will provide faster processing and improved battery life than the 22 nm Bay Trail chip. … The release of Cherry Trail will not make Bay Trail obsolete, as Intel will leverage both chips to cover all spectrums of the tablet market. Cherry Trail will be marketed in high-end devices and Bay Trail delivered in the low-end.”
Intel also is looking to expand its cellular chip portfolio, as it looks to grow sales of its new XMM 7260 4G Long-Term Evolution (LTE) platform – which the company unveiled at the Mobile World Congress 2014 show in February – while drawing down its inventory of 3G chips.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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