Qualcomm had its annual investor day yesterday and with that comes news that the company expects to be selling no less than $4 billion in PC processors annually by 2029 (via CNBC).
If that sounds like a big number, it is. For context, AMD's most recent full-year earnings figures showed that it brought in $4.7 billion in sales for its «client segment» in the most recent quarter, which mostly comprises PC processors and excludes PC graphics cards and chips for consoles.
AMD has admittedly upped its game since then, netting $1.9 billion in the last quarter alone for client PC sales. But Qualcomm's claims would very much put the company in the same ballpark as AMD for client PC processor sales. That would be some achievement, given Qualcomm was virtually starting from zero in the PC market when it launched the Snapdragon X earlier this year.
Intel, meanwhile, reported nearly $30 billion in sales for its «Client Computing Group» in 2023. But that includes not only PC processors, but chips for motherboards, cellular modems, Wi-Fi controllers and more.
You'd still expect Qualcomm's $4 billion to be quite a bit smaller than whatever Intel is currently pulling in from just CPU sales. But however you slice it, Qualcomm is expecting to sell a very large number of its PC processors by 2029. And that means a very large number of Arm-based PCs, presumably mostly laptops, being bought by actual end users.
For now, it's very hard to say how well sales of laptops with Qualcomm Snapdragon X chips have been going. But one key question is whether Qualcomm's success would make for a larger market for PC processors overall, or could it be a zero sum affair, taking away sales from Intel, AMD or presumably both?
The likely reality is a bit of both. But the other imponderable is whether Qualcomm will even be making PC processors by 2029. Qualcomm and Arm are currently fighting it out in the courts over Qualcomm's very right to make CPUs based on Arm's instruction sets.
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