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While 2023 cannot be marked as a great year for the global semiconductor industry, it did mark a small win for Intel Corporation as it retook the crown from Samsung as the world's biggest chip company. The semi-industry is divided into memory and non-memory companies, and both are equally important for outputting products that power the world's computers and gadgets.
Data from Gartner that was released yesterday shows that during 2023, Intel's revenue stood at $48.7 billion, significantly higher than Samsung's $39.9 billion.
Gartner's report covers revenue from chip designers whose products are typically manufactured through contract manufacturing or their own machines. Unlike the chip industry for processors and GPUs, memory chips are made by several firms apart from Intel, and the report covers revenue from all of them. It excludes TSMC since the Taiwanese firm does not design its own products to sell and compete with its customers.
However, the complexities of maintaining its leading-edge processor chip capabilities and churning out all kinds of chips led Intel to diversify away from the memory business in 2022. This decision, announced just before its current CEO took over, seems to have come just at the right time since the bloodbath in the global memory revenue sector has shifted global rankings.
Samsung is now the second biggest semiconductor company in terms of revenue after facing a 37.5% annual revenue drop last year, according to Gartner. In contrast, the research firm shares that Intel's revenue slipped by half, or 16%, allowing Intel to buffer itself to maintain a strong footing.
After Intel and Samsung, which
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