Home Breadcrumb caret Your Business Breadcrumb caret Tech Worldwide IT spending set to rebound in second half 2017, led by cloud and mobile upgrade cycles: report Worldwide IT spending is expected to rebound in the second half of the year, led by cloud and mobile upgrade cycles, International Data Corporation (IDC) said in a new report. According to the latest edition of IDC’s Worldwide Black Book, global IT spending is expected to increase by 4.5% in 2017 in constant currency terms, […] By Canadian Underwriter | July 14, 2017 | Last updated on October 30, 2024 3 min read Worldwide IT spending is expected to rebound in the second half of the year, led by cloud and mobile upgrade cycles, International Data Corporation (IDC) said in a new report. According to the latest edition of IDC’s Worldwide Black Book, global IT spending is expected to increase by 4.5% in 2017 in constant currency terms, “a significant improvement on last year’s growth of 2.5%, with stronger upgrade cycles for infrastructure and mobile devices leading the improvement in the second half of the year.” Total IT spending this year will reach US$2.1 trillion and is forecast to increase by another 4% in 2018 as positive momentum continues into next year. Including telecom services, which will increase by just over 2% in constant currency terms this year, the overall information and communications technology market will reach US$3.5 trillion in 2017, Framingham, Mass.-based IDC said in a press release earlier this week. According to IDC, the strongest growth this year will come from infrastructure hardware, enterprise software and mobile devices. With cloud service providers expected to accelerate their data centre investments in order to keep pace with growing demand for cloud services, total server spending will increase by 4% this year and 5% in 2018. Enterprise spending on server and storage infrastructure will also pick up in the second half of 2017, driven by product refresh cycles, the release said. Meanwhile, demand for infrastructure as a service (IaaS) will remain robust, with spending set to exceed US$25 billion this year and more than US$50 billion by 2020. The report noted that last year saw a “significant slowdown” in the smartphone market, as increasing maturity and price competition affected many markets. Stronger growth is expected in the second half of 2017, as premium vendors launch new products, while smartphone penetration and value continues to grow steadily in key emerging markets, including China. Overall smartphone spending will increase by 7% this year to US$439 billion, a big improvement on last year’s 1% growth, IDC said. “Cloud and mobile are still the big drivers for IT spending, despite the attention devoted to new technologies like augmented reality, artificial intelligence and robotics,” said Stephen Minton, IDC’s vice president, customer insights & analysis. “New technologies will drive a larger share of market growth in the next 5-10 years, but the short term will also see a resurgence of growth in markets tied to 3rd platform opportunities, including cloud services, mobility, and big data.” Related: “Industry-specific disruptive technologies” to contribute to increase in worldwide IT spending: Gartner Software spending will increase by 7% this year to more than US$471 billion in constant currency, driven by continued enterprise investment in big data and analytics alongside ongoing adoption of software-as-a-service (SaaS) and other key growth segments, reported IDC, a global provider of market intelligence, advisory services and events for the IT, telecommunications, and consumer technology markets. IT services will post growth of 3% this year, led by project-oriented services. In telecom services, growth will still be driven by fixed and mobile data services, while voice revenues continue to decline. “While overall market momentum is set to improve, some technologies will continue to drag on industry growth in the near term,” Minton said in the release. “High-end servers are expected to post another year of double-digit decline this year, while hardcopy peripheral spending will fall for the second year in a row. Overall tablet spending will also decline again, despite improving sales of hybrid and detachable models, while sales of traditional PCs and external storage systems will be broadly flat. This year will also see slowing growth for enterprise network equipment and traditional outsourcing services,” Minton said. In terms of region, Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan) will post the strongest regional growth in IT spending this year, set to increase by 8% in constant currency terms, followed by the United States (4%). China and India are both expected to post overall IT spending growth of 10% in constant currency terms this year, although China is likely to see a moderating pace of growth in the next few years as the economy begins to slow, the report said. IT spending growth will be weaker but stable in western Europe (3%), Canada (2%), and Japan (2%) as mature economies continue to face headwinds including Brexit and demographic challenges. Emerging markets including Brazil, Turkey and Nigeria, will show improvements compared to 2016, but will remain sluggish by historical standards. While the U.S. remains the largest IT market, China is now the largest single market for devices and will account for almost 25% of all spending on PCs, tablets, phones and peripherals this year. 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