2017 a Record Year for Infrastructure Shipments – Cisco, Dell EMC and HPE Account for 50%
March 16, 2018 | CanalysEstimated reading time: 2 minutes
The value of worldwide infrastructure shipments, including servers, storage and networking products, reached a record $142 billion in 2017, up 7% on the previous year. Strong growth in servers was the primary factor. Rising DRAM component costs and increasing demand for higher server specifications resulted in ASPs increasing faster than unit shipments. This, combined with ongoing data center expansion by hyperscale cloud service providers, and the start of a new enterprise refresh cycle following the launch of the next generation of Intel and AMD processors, increased server shipment value to US$66 billion. Storage returned to growth after a period of disruption, as spending moved to all-flash and software-defined products. These offset the decline in traditional HDD storage arrays. Networking continued to grow, as investment in data center switching and 11ac Wave 2 wireless LANs for campus and branch environments remained strong. Overall, Ethernet switching grew 7% and wireless LANs were up 9%. Service provider routing remained positive at 1%, but enterprise routing fell 9%.
2017 was also a strong year for the channel selling servers, storage and networking. “The channel continued to dominate infrastructure shipments, collectively representing 74% of the worldwide total,” said Canalys Principal Analyst Matthew Ball. “But direct grew faster, due to the increasing role of Chinese and Taiwanese ODM server vendors selling large volumes to cloud service providers. Direct accounted for 34% of server shipments, compared with 19% for storage and 20% for networking. The massive capital expenditure planned by the hyperscale cloud service providers in upgrading and expanding existing data centers, as well as increasing their geographic presence, will maintain this trend in 2018.”
The top three infrastructure vendors in 2017 were Cisco, Dell EMC and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), which collectively accounted for 50% of total worldwide shipments. “Cisco’s dominance in networking helped it maintain its lead of 20% in the overall infrastructure market. Its focus is on moving its predominantly hardware-centric customer base to software and subscriptions,” said Ball. “Dell EMC completed its first full year of operations, following the US$67 billion merger in September 2016, making it a leader in servers and storage. It grew its share of infrastructure shipments to 15% and was one of the fastest-growing vendors through the channel. HPE’s share of infrastructure shipments was 14%. The focus of its server business has shifted to higher-value segments, with growth in HCI and HPC. The acquisition of Nimble boosted its storage business last year, while Aruba is driving growth in wireless LANs as part of its intelligent edge strategy.”
About Canalys
Canalys is an independent analyst company that strives to guide clients on the future of the technology industry and to think beyond the business models of the past. We deliver smart market insights to IT, channel and service provider professionals around the world. We stake our reputation on the quality of our data, our innovative use of technology and our high level of customer service.
Testimonial
"We’re proud to call I-Connect007 a trusted partner. Their innovative approach and industry insight made our podcast collaboration a success by connecting us with the right audience and delivering real results."
Julia McCaffrey - NCAB GroupSuggested Items
Advanced Packaging-to-Board-Level Integration: Needs and Challenges
09/15/2025 | Devan Iyer and Matt Kelly, Global Electronics AssociationHPC data center markets now demand components with the highest processing and communication rates (low latencies and high bandwidth, often both simultaneously) and highest capacities with extreme requirements for advanced packaging solutions at both the component level and system level. Insatiable demands have been projected for heterogeneous compute, memory, storage, and data communications. Interconnect has become one of the most important pillars of compute for these systems.
Procense Raises $1.5M in Seed Funding to Accelerate AI-Powered Manufacturing
09/11/2025 | BUSINESS WIREProcense, a San Francisco-based industrial automation startup developing cutting-edge AI and remote sensing technologies for process manufacturers has raised $1.5 million in a seed funding round led by Kevin Mahaffey, Business Insider’s #1 seed investor of 2025 and HighSage Ventures, a Boston-based family office that primarily invests in public and private companies in the global software, internet, consumer, and financial technology sectors.
Zuken Announces E3.series 2026 Release for Accelerated Electrical Design and Enhanced Engineering Productivity
09/10/2025 | ZukenZuken reveals details of the upcoming 2026 release of E3.series, which will introduce powerful new features aimed at streamlining electrical and fluid design, enhancing multi-disciplinary collaboration, and boosting engineering productivity.
AI Infrastructure Boosts Global Semiconductor Revenue Growth to 17.6% in 2025
09/09/2025 | IDCAccording to the Worldwide Semiconduct o r Technology and Supply Chain Intelligence service from International Data Corporation (IDC), worldwide semiconductor revenue is expected to reach $800 billion in 2025, growing 17.6% year-over-year from $680 billion in 2024. This follows a strong rebound in 2024, when revenue grew by 22.4% year-over-year.
I-Connect007 Editor’s Choice: Five Must-Reads for the Week
09/05/2025 | Andy Shaughnessy, I-Connect007It’s almost fall here in Atlanta, and that means that the temperature is finally dropping. And it quit raining! It’s been raining since March, and I’m so over it, as the social influencers say. Last night we grilled out on the deck, and it wasn’t hot, and we didn’t get rained on. Life is good. It was a busy week in the industry. In this installment of my must-reads, we say goodbye to Walt Custer, the man who made PCB data points interesting for the rest of us.