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A Billion GPS Chips Expected to Ship in 2013, According to ABI Research
Written by ABI Research
Thursday, 20 March 2008
LONDON-- Satellite-based navigation is a very popular
technology with consumers, and the upsurge in purchases of GPS (Global
Positioning System) devices is fuelling a similar growth in the market
for GPS receiver chipsets.
A new study from ABI Research forecasts GPS IC shipments to reach one billion annually in 2013. Average Selling Prices (ASPs) will continue to fall, but the effect on vendors revenue streams will be more than offset by this strong growth in volume.
Industry analyst Jamie Moss comments, Three factors will intersect to shape the future of the GPS IC market. The average price of the chipset will fall to $3.50 or below by the end of 2008, permitting a true mass market adoption. This fall in ASP is driven by manufacturers goal of producing receivers that can be included in lower-margin devices such as mobile phones: handset-based GPS will be critical to strong market penetration. The benefits will filter down to more traditional GPS uses such as in-car navigation. Meanwhile, were seeing growing numbers of acquisitions: large chip manufacturers buying up specialist fabless GPS IC vendors in order to include their technologies in solutions that combine GPS with varied wireless RF product offerings, especially Bluetooth.
Significant examples of such acquisitions in the second half of 2007 include Global Locate, acquired by Broadcom; GloNav by NXP; and u-Nav by Atheros.
In 2007, one firm SiRF held a commanding 70% share of the GPS IC market. It achieved this by getting in early and aggressively targeting the market for consumer devices: while professional GPS has been around for some time, it is a much smaller and slower-growing market segment.
In terms of absolute performance, says Moss, theres not a lot to choose between rival manufacturers. To win important contracts the chipset must be as inexpensive as possible and as easy as possible for device manufacturers to integrate with Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, FM radio and cellular solutions. As it was with Bluetooth, there is no great proactive consumer demand for GPS in mobile phones today, but once its there, people will use it and expect it.
The new ABI Research report, GPS Semiconductors, (http://www.abiresearch.com/products/market_research/GPS_Semiconductor s) offers vital insight into ongoing innovation in GPS IC design and performance and provides crucial data for GPS IC average selling prices, shipments and revenues to 2013. It forms part of two ABI Research Services: Location Aware Services (http://www.abiresearch.com/products/service/Location_Aware_Services) and Wireless Semiconductors (http://www.abiresearch.com/products/service/Wireless_Semiconductors_S ervice).
ABI Research is a leading market research firm focused on the impact of emerging technologies on global consumer and business markets. Utilizing a unique blend of market intelligence, primary research, and expert assessment from its worldwide team of industry analysts, ABI Research assists hundreds of clients each year with their strategic growth initiatives. For information, visit www.abiresearch.com, or call +1.516.624.2500.
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