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IDC (www.idc.com.sg)
global market intelligence and advisory firm in the information technology
and telecommunications industries, is forecasting double-digit growth
for the Asia/Pacific ICT market (excluding Japan) in 2005, according to
IDC's recently published research highlighting its top 10 predictions
for the Information and Communications Technology (ICT) market in the
region.
"Last year we
predicted that the IT market would resurrect in 2004, after a three-year
slump in technology related investments. This year we predict that the
IT market in Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan) will maintain this growth
momentum and will grow by 10% in 2005 to US$97bn, despite prospects of
a slower economic growth relative to 2004. The total telecom services
market in the region will grow by 11% to US$163bn in 2005, driven primarily
by growth in IP, broadband and wireless services," said Piyush Singh,
Managing Director, IDC Asia/Pacific.
IDC's top 10 predictions
for the Asia/Pacific excluding Japan (APEJ) ICT markets are drawn from
IDC's latest research, and a worldwide brainstorming exercise among IDC's
more than 700 analysts. This was followed by an extensive regional review
to weigh in on key industry trends in 2005 in APEJ and on the strategic
choices the industry's leaders will face in the coming year. Across virtually
all ICT market areas, IDC predicts that 2005 will be a year of convergence,
consolidation, innovation and realignment.
"The current
ICT industry structure is inefficient and highly fragmented with numerous
players competing in each market segment. At the same time, disruptive
innovations continue to shift and re-define competitive markets. Given
the imminent pressures on profits due to a combination of moderating industry
growth worldwide, and intense global competition, industry consolidation
will accelerate over the coming years as the industry evolves towards
an optimal competitive structure in each major market segment. Companies
that emerge successfully through the structural transformation underway
will be the big winners in the coming decade", noted Singh.
IDC's top 10 predictions
for the ICT Market in APEJ for 2005 are as follows:
1. IT Spending
in Asia/Pacific excluding Japan (APEJ) will grow by 10% in 2005, despite
slower economic growth
IT spending in Asia/Pacific
excluding Japan (APEJ) is expected to remain robust in 2005, replicating
its growth of 10% in 2004, over the prior year (in constant US$ exchange
rates). Total IT spending in the region will reach US$97bn in 2005, driven
by a healthy 15% growth in China (excluding Hong Kong) and 22% growth
in India. These two countries will account for 42% of total IT spending
in APEJ in 2005, with China being the more dominant market with 33% share
of total IT spending in APEJ. The high growth product/service market segments
in 2005 will be: smart handheld devices, IT planning and implementation
services, IT training and education, application software, and system
infrastructure software.
2. Wireless services
market will overtake fixed-line services in APEJ
The total telecom
services market in APEJ is expected to reach US$163bn in 2005, which represents
a growth of 11% over 2004. More than half of this revenue will accrue
from wireless services in 2005, marking an industry transition that began
almost a decade ago.
3. Semiconductor
market will correct in 2005, registering a 2% dip in worldwide revenues
The worldwide semiconductor
market has entered a correction phase triggered by supplier expectations
of high demand and resulting overproduction. This correction is expected
to produce an overall negative growth of 2% in 2005 with revenues reaching
$205bn. This follows from a 26% growth in 2004, where revenues totaled
$210bn. Supplier expectations for a strong market led to a 48% surge in
capital spending in 2004. However, significant variations in monthly demand
forced manufacturers to slow production in the second half of the year.
4. Consolidation
and commoditization of IT hardware infrastructure will accelerate industry
realignment
Reducing complexity
in the datacenter and improving operational efficiency will be high on
the agenda of enterprise users in 2005. The hardware infrastructure upgrade
cycle that picked up steam in 2004 will continue into 2005, though at
a slower rate in revenue terms, as prices continue to decline and hardware
commoditization accelerates. Consolidation of servers and storage infrastructure
will be a leading trend across countries in APEJ.
5. Security remains
on top of CIO agenda; focus on end-to-end solutions
Along with the dual
imperatives of improving operational efficiency and business responsiveness
of IT, security will remain at the top of CIO agenda in 2005. The responsibility
of safe-guarding the information assets of the organization and ensuring
IT dependent business continuity lies with the CIO. Robust end-to-end
security solutions that include all layers of infrastructure, access and
applications are critical in our increasingly networked business world.
On the back of this trend, the security software market in APEJ is expected
to grow by 18.9% to US$818.4mn in 2005.
6. Linux will expand
within server operating environments
Linux software license
revenues are forecast to grow from US$6.48mn in 2004 to US$11.6mn in 2005
in APEJ, showing a year-on-year growth of 78.6%. This trend will continue
over the next four years, and Linux software license revenues will reach
US$69.8mn by 2008 at a compounded annual growth rate of 82.5%. Most of
the growth will come from the server operating environment market, where
Linux has been getting more traction and where users have indicated more
optimistic usage plans. India and China present the largest opportunities
for Linux adoption and migration in the server market.
7. Offshore services
and BPO will accelerate
In 2005, "offshoring"
will accelerate as enterprises race to lower their cost structure, amidst
global competition. On the other hand, the industry will continue to shift
its capabilities and offerings closer to business processes and value,
through greater investment in business consulting and process expertise,
as well as greater focus on Business Process Outsourcing.
IDC expects comparatively
rapid adoption of BPO in emerging markets in Asia as local companies increasingly
compete with global entities and face continual changes in regulatory
dynamics. Clearly these markets offer limited scope for labor arbitrage,
so for such markets, it will be all about the ability to provide world-class
services in the most cost effective and efficient manner. IDC expects
the uptake of BPO in APEJ to spread across a range of processes, in particular
human resources, procurement, financial accounting, logistics and industry
specific solutions such as check and bill processing, and risk management.
8. Enterprise Solutions
Platforms (ESPs) will reshape the application software business
ESPs - IDC's term
for the emerging generation of application integration platforms like
SAP's NetWeaver, Oracle Information Architecture (OIA), PeopleSoft's AppConnect,
Siebel's Universal Application Network (UAN), and to some degree IBM's
WebSphere, BEA's WebLogic and Microsoft's .NET - is moving the focus of
the business applications market away from large, monolithic packages,
towards the componentization of application functionality, exposure of
functional components as reusable services, and linkage of components
that define a business process through a dynamic integration environment.
Navigating the complete
transition towards ESP will take several years - even for the dominant
enterprise application vendors. In 2005, the major application vendors
will push for greater adoption by customers, and focus by the channel.
9. Digital home
will establish a foothold in developed markets in the region
Given the increasing
amount of digital content, devices and networks available, the digital
home will start becoming a reality in several countries in APEJ in 2005.
There are a number of converging technologies and applications playing
a role in shaping the digital home market: TV, PCs, mobile phones, handhelds,
printers, audio-visual equipment, appliances, digital content, broadband
access, home networking and digital cameras, will form the key components
of the digital home as a whole.
Having a fast Internet
connection will strongly influence the way in which consumers listen to
music, play online games and watch news or videos. According to IDC's
latest forecasts, 69.3mn households in Asia/Pacific will have broadband
Internet access by 2008, representing 9.4% of all households in the region.
Growth of broadband penetration together with availability of online content
and services will further drive digital convergence in the region.
10. Three emerging
technologies will be on the verge in 2005
In spite of the talk
of a "maturing" IT industry, 2005 will see lots of IT innovation.
Many will be in the mainstream of today's markets - in the form of system
packaging, virtualization, automated management, voice-over-IP, converged
devices, integration platforms, and composite applications and web services.
2005 will also see the growth in interest and importance of innovations
at the periphery, including sensor-enhanced RFID, mesh networks and semantic
Web technologies.
For more information
about the research, please contact Selina Ang at +65-6228-7717 or sang@idc.com.
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