Spending on enterprise infrastructure down but on public cloud up

New Q1 2020 data from Synergy Research Group shows global data center hardware and software expenditures are down 2 percent from Q1 2019, a steady growth trend as the market was negatively impacted by COVID-19.

The pandemic had relatively little impact on the infrastructure of public cloud data centers, where hardware and software vendors saw revenues increase 3 percent, but sales to enterprises and traditional service providers fell 4 percent.

In terms of market share, ODMs together represent the bulk of the public cloud market, with Dell Technologies as the leading tech supplier, followed by Microsoft, Inspur and Cisco. The Q1 market leader in business infrastructure was Microsoft, followed by Dell, HPE, Cisco and VMware.

Total data center infrastructure equipment revenues, including both cloud and non-cloud, hardware and software, were $35.8 billion in Q1, with public cloud infrastructure accounting for over 37% of the total.

The main hardware-oriented segments of servers, storage and networking in aggregate accounted for 73% of the data center infrastructure market. OS, virtualization software, cloud management and network security account for the balance.

By segment, Dell is the leader in both server and storage revenues, while Cisco is dominant in the networking segment.

Microsoft features heavily in the rankings due to its position in server OS and virtualization applications. Outside of these three, the other leading vendors in the market are HPE, VMware, Inspur, Huawei, IBM, Lenovo and NetApp. Inspur is the major vendor with the highest growth rate.

“Cloud service revenues continue to grow by almost 40% per year, enterprise SaaS revenues are growing by almost 25%, search/social networking revenues are growing by over 15%, and e-commerce revenues are growing by over 20%, all of which are helping to drive growth and increased spending on public cloud infrastructure,” said John Dinsdale, a Chief Analyst at Synergy Research Group.

“Notably, most of these services are either little impacted by COVID-19 or may be stimulated by changed enterprise and consumer behavior. On the other hand, many enterprises have been negatively impacted by the pandemic resulting in increased pressure on capital budgets and more impetus on shifting workloads to public cloud providers.”

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