Worldwide external controller-based (ECB) disk storage vendor revenue totalled $6-billion in the fourth quarter of 2012, a 1,9% increase from revenue of $5,9-billion in the fourth quarter of 2011, according to Gartner.
“The fourth quarter 2012 results represent the 13th consecutive quarter of revenue growth, says Roger Cox, research VP at Gartner.
“However, the anaemic year-on-year 1,9% growth is a reflection of the dour macroeconomics in North America and in Europe, as well as a slowing economy in the Asia/Pacific region.”
EMC, Hitachi/Hitachi Data Systems (HDS) and NetApp beat the year-on-year market growth rate in the fourth quarter. EMC gained share with its fit-for-purpose VNX, VMAX and Data Domain platforms, as well as the accretive influence of the Isilon acquisition.
After a couple of spotty quarters, and with most its platform portfolio (FAS2000/FAS3000) refreshed, coupled with improving traction of its clustered Data ONTAP operating system, NetApp realised above-market results. With best-in-class year-on-year revenue growth performance, the high-end VSP remained Hitachi/HDS’s primary strength.
Dell, HP and IBM continue to underperform the market and lose share for fundamentally the same reasons. Their new product year-on-year revenue gains are insufficient to offset the year-on-year decline of the products being replaced.
Moreover, Dell may be suffering from organisational and structural issues that are hampering sales. HP continues to struggle with balancing the decline in what it classifies as “traditional storage” with its growing “converged” go-to-market model. IBM’s strategy of emphasising its IP-based disk storage products is gaining traction, but is not yet strong enough to offset declines in technology sourced from NetApp.
For the year, worldwide disk storage vendor revenue totalled $22,3-billion in 2012, a 4,9% increase from revenue of $21,2-billion in 2011. Only EMC and Hitachi/HDS topped the market, but NetApp and Dell did achieve year-on-year revenue gains.
Dell was stronger in the first half of 2012, while NetApp came on strong in the second half of 2012. Although pricing per terabyte continues to decline as expected, the average selling price (ASP) per unit increased 6,8% in 2012, signalling larger configurations.
Gartner ECB disk storage reports reflect vendor-branded hardware-only revenue, as well as hardware revenue associated with financial leases and managed services. Optional and separately priced storage software revenue and storage area network infrastructure components are excluded.