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The World Connector Market for Consumer Electronics
Research Report CE-601-05
Print Copy $3,500
Print Copy + CD (Single User License) $3,850
Print Copy + CD (Multi-User Corporate License) $4,550
Published July 2005


Bishop and Associates has just released a new six-chapter research report covering The World Connector Market for Consumer Electronics This report provides a comprehensive analysis of connector usage in the appliance, HVAC security, imaging systems, TV/video, audio systems, video games/toys, consumer automotive, and other segments of the world consumer electronics market. Statistics are presented showing historical and forecast connector shipments to the consumer market for the years 2002 through 2009.

Driven by strong demand for digital audio, video and home information products, consumer electrical and electronics equipment, sales in 2004 grew to an all time high of $143 billion in the US, and $286 billion worldwide. This total includes both consumer electronics and consumer electrical equipment, (home appliances & HVAC) which have increasing electronic content. Recent developments have been significant, with both heightened global competition and new opportunities. A market that had lost its luster for many manufacturers is now a rising star for others.

Consumer Electrical - Electronics Industry 2002-2005

The following industry segments are being transformed by a number of powerful forces:

  Digital convergence and its attendant technical challenges.
New products & applications, including luxury goods.
Product miniaturization, mobility and wireless technology.
Crossbreeding with other industry segments (computers, telecom, etc).
Globalization of manufacturing with significant industry consolidation.
Globalization of demand with emerging 3rd world.

Convergence - This means the convergence of digital silicon technology (and firmware) with consumer products, resulting in many new products and features not possible with traditional analog circuitry. Examples: PDAs, Smart Phones, HDTV, Satellite Radio, and the iPod.

New Products - Partly resulting from the computer revolution, but also from government dual use and massive innovation made possible by digital circuitry. The list of new products is staggering and increases daily.

Miniaturization - Much of the growth in consumer electronics is in handheld devices, enabled through years of perfecting small form factor packaging and system-in-package techniques.

Cross-Breeding with Other Industries - Convergence with Computer & Peripherals spawned Ink Jet Printers, Wireless LANs and Digital Cameras; Telecom developed Mobile Phones; the military GPS technology. Large segments of Computer/Peripheral and Telecom are now Consumer.

Globalization of Manufacturing - Outsourcing and the emergence of China as a manufacturing powerhouse has accelerated the development of low cost production in a wide range of products. This has helped increase demand for consumer electronics products. At the same time, there is significant industry consolidation on one side, and numerous startups in high growth areas on the other.

Globalization of Demand - Western countries are still the largest markets, particularly for upscale consumer products. However, other areas are beginning to grow at a rapid pace, and do most of the manufacturing (e.g. China, India and Eastern Europe).

Major Growth Areas

The following list represents some of the applications driving market expansion:

  Handheld Communicators (smart phones)
Wireless Technologies: GPRS/Edge, WiFi, Bluetooth, UWB
Home Networking: WiFi, 10B1000, other
Consumer Laptops & other PC products
High Definition TV
Home Theatre & Media Centers (Audio, Media Server, Other)
Flat Panel Display Technologies (LCD, Plasma, DLP)
Satellite TV (DirecTV, EchoStar, Voom)
Video Recording (TiVo, DVRs, DVD+, Set Top Boxes)
Digital Photography and Printing (Cameras, Camcorder
Flash Memory Storage Devices (SD, MiniSD, XD, Mem. Stick)
Satellite Radio (XM, Sirius)        
Digital Audio & MP3 Players (iPod, Digital Stereo, Digital Radio)
Satellite Navigation (GPS)
Video Games (Xbox, Playstation, PSP1, GameBoy, etc)
Digital Radio

Implications For Connectors

Historical Perspective - Many connector manufacturers downgraded the consumer electronics market long ago because they generally couldn’t produce acceptable returns. Suppliers focused on other markets where the financial demographics were more attractive, consumer automotive and home appliances being two major examples. At the same time, the computer and telecom markets were growing, and used more sophisticated designs with higher ASPs.

The downgrading of consumer electronics market resulted from early waves of offshore radio and TV assembly, coupled with low cost foreign competition and the rise of an Asian manufacturing infrastructure in consumer products. Some companies who had a major Asian presence also shunned the consumer market due to the pullback of their western parent companies. Others, particularly in Japan and later in the Asia Pacific region, jumped in with both feet.

These Asia sources learned and eventually prospered, becoming low cost producers with varying degrees of diversification in this highly competitive arena. This is an interesting dynamic for the connector industry, because in retrospect, being able to succeed from a low cost/high volume base in consumer produced an economy of scale that allowed the extension of this capability into the automotive, computer and telecom markets as they too developed consumer characteristics.

Present and Future - Many companies, recognizing the link between consumer, computer-peripheral and telecom, have merged marketing and engineering activities and undergone significant restructuring which will enhance their ability to compete in the consumer electronics market. This includes segment headquarters in Taiwan, Singapore, or Japan, with extensive manufacturing facilities and outsourcing in China, and strong relationships with Asian ODM and CEM customers. At the same time, many consumer electronics products, notably LCD and Plasma TVs, set-top boxes, DVRs and other products have developed characteristics that are more compelling for connector suppliers. Such as:

  Higher ticket items.
Higher design complexity than historically true in CE.
Rapid growth scenarios in applications such as flat panel displays.
Somewhat less standardization, more mass-customization to achieve ‘engineered’ cost targets.
Thus a greater ability to succeed with new product designs and ‘designs-for-assembly’.
Leveraging existing and developing relationships in the global supply chain.
Cross-selling standards – typically IO connectors (USB, IEEE-1394, Pin Headers).
Cross-selling special-application connectors (appliance wire-to-board, FEC, Ribbon).
Cross-linkage between electronic and electrical connector designs & opportunities.
As Asian footprints expand, regional market potentials also open up for the future.
Ability to compete ‘where the action is’ in Taipei, Shenzhen, Qingdao or Shanghai.
Leverage other capabilities in Sockets, PCB, FEC, Stacking, Wire-to-Board and IO.

 Consumer Electronics Connector Sales & Percent Change 2002 - 2005


 




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