PUBLISHER: MTN Consulting, LLC | PRODUCT CODE: 1388505
PUBLISHER: MTN Consulting, LLC | PRODUCT CODE: 1388505
This report reviews the growth and development of the webscale network operator (WNO) market since 2011. In the most recent 12 months (4Q22-3Q23), webscalers represented $2.32 trillion (T) in revenues (+3.7% YoY), $289 billion (B) in R&D spending (+13.1% YoY), and $192B in capex (-3.8% YoY). They had $710B of cash and short-term investments (+16.2% YoY) on the books as of September 2023, and $562B in total debt (+3.1% YoY). Webscalers employed approximately 4.099 million (M) people at the end of 3Q23, slightly up from 2Q23 but down 1.6% from September 2022.
The webscale market skyrocketed during COVID. In 1Q20, when COVID first emerged, annualized revenues were just under $1.5 trillion. Just 6 quarters later, in 3Q21, the sector reached the $2 trillion mark. This stunning growth moderated in 2022 due to macroeconomic issues, weak ad sales, and China's slow growth and ongoing constraint of the tech sector. The market is picking up again in 2023, however, as annualized revenues hit $2.32 trillion in 3Q23, up 7.2% YoY.
By company, all top 8 webscalers grew single quarter revenues YoY in 3Q23, with the exception of Apple. Its revenues are cyclical, though, impacted by device refreshes and upgrade cycles. Amazon and Meta were the biggest positives in 3Q23. Amazon's 3Q23 revenues were $16B higher than 3Q22, or up 12.6% on a percentage basis; Meta's revenues grew $6.4B vs. 3Q22, or up by 12.8%. Microsoft and Alphabet also saw double digit revenue growth rates in 3Q23, while China's webscalers remain in a holding pattern of sluggish growth. They have also been impacted by US restrictions on technology procurement.
In 3Q23, webscalers spent $48.0B and $72.2B on capex and R&D, respectively.
For capex, the result represents the second consecutive 9% YoY decline. We have already issued a revised forecast alert, and expect full year capex to come in about 5-10% lower than projected. None of the key webscalers are in trouble, and all expect future growth in capex, with generative AI an additional driver for investment. For R&D, actual spending in 3Q23 was 4.7% higher than 3Q22; however, for once R&D spend grew more slowly than revenues, pushing 12 month R&D intensity down slightly, to 12.4% of revenues. Generative AI is one of many focal points for webscale R&D. Webscalers are also spending heavily on R&D to develop their own chips and customized data center designs.
The tech portion of capex ("Network, IT and software") has grown as a % of total recently, but other capex (mostly related to land & buildings) is still comfortably over 50% of total. For the four quarters ended 3Q23, Network/IT/software accounted for $90B of the $192B total. Tech grew YoY in 3Q23, while other capex declined.
From a separate MTN Consulting study, we found that energy consumption by webscalers in 2022 grew about 16% YoY, to 136.6 terawatt hours (TWh). That growth exceeds the 3% and 7% recorded by the telco & carrier-neutral sectors, respectively. Webscale energy consumption is driven primarily by the sector's installed base of data centers, which has expanded dramatically in the last 3 years: net PP&E on the books totaled $397B in 3Q20, and reached $679B just 3 years later in 3Q23.
In sustainability matters, one important recent development is bad news for Amazon. In September 2023, Amazon was dropped by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) as a validated company, due to failure to reach agreement on commitments; concerns exist around Amazon's reporting of Scope 3 emissions, and accounting for renewables. The fact that the biggest webscaler is no longer officially validated with SBTi is a disappointment, but also a reminder that sustainability reporting is a nascent field and data cannot always be relied upon.
This report series traditionally breaks out revenues by region for each webscaler. With the previous edition of the report, we added our first regional breakout of capex, focused on the US. Our analysis finds that the US has amounted to between 50-60% of global webscale capex for most of the last decade. This percentage increased in the last two years, ending 2022 at an incredible 65%. Some of this growth is due to a capex surge by US-centric Amazon in 2021-22. We don't expect this dominance by the US to continue. The ratio is likely to return below 50% soon as webscalers expand their footprints in other regions. Spending pickups by China-based cloud providers will be one driver of this moderation.
A decade ago, the webscale sector did not exist. Big tech companies were just beginning to build their own data centers to optimize their cost structure, operational efficiency, and time to market. But webscale capex was a rounding error in the overall market for network infrastructure. That's not the case anymore. Webscale capex surpassed $200B for the first time in 2022. Annualized webscale capex has since fallen below $200B, but that is a short-term blip.
Telco capex is still higher, and will remain so for the next few years. But, webscale capex is far more concentrated, as it is dominated by a few big spenders, and it is focused on a smaller range of product types and vendors. Some aspects of webscale capex are more leading edge; innovations in the data center often impact other types of networks (e.g. high-speed optics for telco backbone networks). As such, the market will continue to be important for lots of vendors - and not just chip suppliers.
Here is a summary of the spending outlook for key webscalers:
Our latest official forecast for the webscale market calls for $218B of 2023 capex. This target is 5-10% too high. However, the tech portion of webscale capex is higher than expected, helping to offset the top-line forecast underperformance. Moreover, data center spend by webscalers is moderating, not crashing. Rising interest rates are the main factor in this gap, as several companies point specifically to high borrowing costs as enticing them to moderate the pace of buildouts. The effect is small so far, though, and many other positive factors are driving investment; GenAI in particular. MTN Consulting will formally update its projections for the webscale market in December 2023.
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