The research found that quarterly revenue grew 3.8% to $124.3bn in this period, in line with historical patterns for the total semiconductor market. Second quarter revenue has increased on average by 3.4% from the first quarter (using data from 2002 through 2022).
However, growth within semiconductor segments continues to diverge from historical trends with the DRAM market, for example, up 15% in 2Q23 compared to a historical pattern of 7.5% in the second quarter.
The growth is a welcome sign for the semiconductor industry after the longest period of declines since Omdia began tracking the market in 2002. However, the toll of the shrinking market has reduced the current market considerably, with the semiconductor market by revenue now at 79% of what it was one year ago when total revenue was $160bn in 2Q22.
NVIDIA led the semiconductor turnaround in 2Q23. Industry wide, semiconductor revenue grew $4.6bn from the previous quarter, and $2.5bn of that increased quarterly revenue came from NVIDIA alone. The rapid, recent growth in demand for generative AI, a market that NVIDIA dominates, is pushing NVIDIA up the market share rankings.
The data processing segment, driven by AI chips into the server space, grew 15% quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) and makes up nearly one-third of semiconductor revenue (31% in 2Q23). The wireless segment (dominated by smartphones) is the second largest segment but declined 3% QoQ as end-demand in this sector continues to be weak. The automotive semiconductor sector continues to grow, up 3.2%.
NVIDIA has led the turnaround, increasing semiconductor revenue 47.5% from the previous quarter. One year ago, NVIDIA was the 9th largest semiconductor company by revenue, at the end of Q2-23 its ranking was third. While NVIDIA was the biggest influence on the growing market, most major firms also contributed to the growth. Of the top ten firms, eight increased semiconductor revenue in 2Q23, illustrating that the turnaround is not limited to one sector of the overall market.