Qualcomm buy may pit Broadcom against Intel in
'connected car' fight
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[November 08, 2017]
By Stephen Nellis
(Reuters) - If Broadcom Ltd's unsolicited
$103 billion bid for Qualcomm Inc succeeds, it could set up a battle
with Intel Corp for dominance in the production of the next generation
of communications chips, which will play a vital role in so-called
connected cars.
Vehicles of every sort already are starting to add wireless chips to
download everything from maps to entertainment, and in a few years
nearly every new car may be connected. Self-driving cars, still in test
mode, will accelerate the move.
“The amount of chips per car is going to grow dramatically,” said Egil
Juliussen, a principal analyst for automotive technology at IHSMarkit.
Chip makers are scrambling to create new mobile networks, the so-called
fifth generation, which will link phones as well as cars, drones and
even industrial devices such as smart street lights, which count
pedestrians and send data to city planners.
Qualcomm long was the dominant communications chip maker for mobile
phones, although computer chip maker Intel has begun muscling into the
space. Each now supplies about half Apple Inc's iPhone communications
chips, for instance.
Now they are jockeying in a mature market to design so-called 5G
networks that will be up to 10 times as fast as wireless networks today,
which are expected to start rolling out in 2020. Research firm IDC
predicts 1.53 billion smart phones will be shipped in 2017 expanding to
only 1.77 billion units in 2021.
The market for modem chips for cars, by contrast, is expected to grow
sharply. Tristan Gerra, a senior semiconductor analyst for Robert W.
Baird & Co, said that this year, only about 12 million of the 90 million
cars manufactured per year have internet connectivity. But connectivity
will become ubiquitous on self-driving cars.
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The Intel logo is shown at the E3 2017 Electronic Entertainment Expo
in Los Angeles, California, U.S. June 13, 2017. REUTERS/ Mike Blake
"You basically (will) have 80 million units per year that are going to get a
modem," he said.
Intel and Qualcomm declined to comment.
Qualcomm itself is trying to buy NXP Semiconductors, a maker of automotive chips
from so-called "infotainment" system chips to camera systems, for $38 billion.
It is unclear whether that deal will go through and whether Broadcom would take
on NXP, but Broadcom has said it is willing to do so.
A tie-up between the three companies could create a formidable competitor in the
automotive chip space, said IHSMarkit's Juliussen. He views Intel and Nvidia
Corp, which make both make the main processors used in self-driving vehicles, as
leaders in the young market, but a combined Broadcom-Qualcomm-NXP would be a
strong third-place.
Intel has bought itself into relationships with autonomous car developers thanks
to its acquisition of vision system maker Mobileye. Broadcom would get something
similar with NXP, Juliussen said.
If Broadcom pulls off both deals, its market position in some areas could be
dominant, said Cowen and Co analyst Karl Ackerman.
"[Broadcom] would basically own the majority of the high-end components in the
smart phone market and they would have a very significant influence on 5G
standards, which are paramount as you think about autonomous vehicles" and
connected factories, he said.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis, editing by Peter Henderson and Tom Brown)
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