Core Insights - Marvell is rapidly emerging as a strong player in the application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) market, planning to collaborate with TSMC on advanced processes below 3nm [1][2] - TSMC holds over 60% market share in the foundry market and is targeting the emerging application-specific semiconductor manufacturing market driven by AI growth [1] - Application-specific semiconductors are designed for specific functions, offering lower costs, reduced power consumption, and less overall investment compared to general-purpose GPUs, making them attractive in AI data centers, automotive, and IoT markets [1] Group 1 - Marvell's next-generation AI application-specific chips will utilize TSMC's 3nm and 2nm processes, with production of 3nm chips already underway [2] - The company aims to enhance performance through silicon photonics technology, which can increase data transmission speeds by over ten times [2] - Marvell's revenue reached $5.76 billion last year, with AI-related revenue exceeding $1.5 billion, expected to surpass $2.5 billion this year [2] Group 2 - TSMC currently provides over 70% of the production foundry for Broadcom's chips and is increasing collaboration with Marvell to capture the growing application-specific semiconductor market [3] - The application-specific semiconductor market was valued at approximately $20.29 billion last year and is projected to grow to $32.84 billion by 2031 [3] - Marvell has launched data center chips manufactured using TSMC's 3nm process and plans to expand collaboration to include 2nm processes [3] Group 3 - TSMC's global foundry market share reached 67.6% in Q1 this year, significantly outpacing competitors, while Samsung's market share was only 7.7% [4] - Samsung is also collaborating with Broadcom and Marvell on advanced processes but needs to improve yield and performance to enhance its competitive edge [4]
Marvell,主导定制芯片市场