MCUs back on a roll

After a tough three years, microcontrollers are expected to grow 6% this year to $16bn, 7% next year and 9% in 2016 after a flat 2013 and a 3% fall in 2012, says IC Insights.

Spansion MCUs

In the next five years microcontroller CAGR is put at 4.6% to reach $19.8bn in 2018.

The principal reason for MCU growth is a strong recovery in the smartcard market. Smartcard MCU sales fell 12% in 2013 but are now on track to grow 19% in 2014.


IC Insights’ Aldo thinks internet of things (IoT) and wearables will push this market.


In unit terms, After declining 7% in 2013, worldwide microcontroller shipments are now forecast to climb 12% in 2014 and reach a new record-high 18.1 billion units this year, thanks to a strong rebound in 8-bit and 32-bit smartcard microcontrollers for electronic banking, automatic teller machines (ATMs), secure credit and debit cards, mass-transit fares, government IDs, and security applications.

Smartcard MCUs represent nearly half of all microcontrollers shipped worldwide but generate less than 20% of the total dollar sales volume due to their ultra-low average selling price.

IC Insights’ forecast shows smartcard MCU shipments rising 20% in 2014 to 8.7 billion units after a 23% drop in 2013.

The rest of MCU units – serving a wide range of embedded functions in systems – are forecast to increase 6% to 9.4 billion devices in 2014 after rising 12% in 2013.

Overall, an explosion of 32-bit microcontroller shipments is reshaping the market as suppliers aggressively promote more powerful MCU designs that are cost competitive with 8-bit and 16-bit devices.

In some cases new 32-bit MCUs are being priced well under $1, in high-unit volumes, and below the cost of 8-bit microcontrollers.

Between 2013 and 2018, total 32-bit MCU sales are expected to grow by a CAGR of 9.5%, reaching $11.0bn in 2018.

Four-bit and 8-bit MCU sales are forecast to fall by a CAGR of 1.3% to $3.7bn in 2018, while 16-bit revenues will barely grow at an annual rate of 0.3%, remaining at $4.2bn in five years.

 

David Manners

David Manners

David Manners has more than forty-years experience writing about the electronics industry, its major trends and leading players. As well as writing business, components and research news, he is the author of the site's most popular blog, Mannerisms. This features series of posts such as Fables, Markets, Shenanigans, and Memory Lanes, across a wide range of topics.

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