Channel Research

HPE ‘still leader’ in cloud infrastructure market

HPE maintained its leadership in the burgeoning cloud infrastructure equipment market in the fourth quarter last year, although Cisco narrowed the gap, according to research.

In a market that is growing at well over 20 percent per year both vendors saw “strong growth” in their cloud infrastructure revenues, said Synergy Research Group. The two vendors have been in a closely contested leadership battle for the last eight quarters.

Dell and Microsoft were virtually tied for third place in the market. But all four leading vendors saw sequential market share declines as IBM benefited from its typically strong year-end, and ODMs (contract manufacturers) continued to take away business from more traditional vendors, said Synergy.

Across the different types of cloud deployment, Cisco continues to hold a commanding lead in public cloud infrastructure while HP has a clear lead in private cloud. Total cloud infrastructure equipment revenues, including hardware and software, reached well over $60 billion in 2015.

HPE has a clear lead in the cloud server segment and is a main challenger in storage, while Cisco is dominant in the networking segment and also has a rapidly growing server product line,” Synergy said.

Microsoft features heavily in the rankings due to its position in server OS and virtualisation applications, while Dell and IBM maintain a strong position across a range of cloud technology markets.

Servers, OS, storage, networking and virtualisation software combined accounted for 95 percent of the Q4 cloud infrastructure market, with the balance comprising cloud security and cloud management.

There continues to be particularly impressive growth in the public cloud infrastructure market as AWS and other cloud operators are having tremendous success in attracting enterprises to their ever-expanding range of service offerings,” said Jeremy Duke, Synergy Research Group chief analyst.

But enterprises too are buying ever-larger volumes of infrastructure to support their private or hybrid cloud deployments. Across the board there is a massive swing away from enterprises running workloads over more traditional and inflexible IT infrastructure.”

@AntonySavvas

Antony Savvas

York, UK-based Antony Savvas has been a technology journalist for 25 years and has expertise in all major areas of enterprise and consumer IT. He has worked for a number of leading technology magazines and websites and his work is syndicated across the internet. He also undertakes corporate work for some of the world's leading technology companies.

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