Global cloud IT infrastructure market up by 25 per cent to $6.3 billion

Private and public cloud infrastructures have been growing at a similar pace

Update: 2015-07-05 12:07 GMT
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New Delhi: Strong demand boosted sales of infrastructure products like server, storage and ethernet  switches for global cloud IT by 25.1 per cent year-on-year to  USD 6.27 billion in the first quarter of 2015, research firm  IDC has said. The industry segment had an estimated revenue of USD 5.01  billion in January-March quarter of 2014. Cloud computing facilitates sharing of technological  resources, software and digital information. It operates on a  pay-per-use model, helping companies to cut costs as they do  not have to invest heavily in infrastructure. 

According to various industry reports, public and private  cloud services is expected to be a multi-billion opportunity  for IT firms as clients move to the cloud to host their data  and applications to become more agile and increase cost  efficiencies. 

Public IT cloud services spending alone are estimated to grow to more than USD 127 billion in 2018.  Interestingly, cloud accounted for nearly 30 per cent of  the overall spending on IT infrastructure in the January-March  2015 period, up from 26.4 per cent a year ago, IDC said in a  statement.  This is the second-highest growth in five quarters (in  which IDC has tracked y-o-y revenue) and the second-largest in  terms of total spending in nine quarters of tracking.  "Revenue from infrastructure sales for private cloud grew  by 24.4 per cent y-o-y to USD 2.4 billion," IDC said. On the other hand, sales for public cloud grew 25.5 per  cent to USD 3.9 billion.  "Cloud IT infrastructure growth continues to outpace the  growth of the overall IT infrastructure market, driven by the  transition of workloads onto cloud-based platforms," IDC  Research Manager (Server, Virtualisation and Workload  Research) Kuba Stolarski said. 

Both private and public cloud infrastructures have been growing at a similar pace, suggesting that customers are open  to a broad array of hybrid deployment scenarios as they  modernise their IT, Stolarski added.  According to IDC, HP led the tally with 15.7 per cent  share of this market, followed by Dell (11.9 per cent), Cisco  (9.3 per cent) and EMC (7.2 per cent).  

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