For once, the trends are in the favor of customers as IT equipment gets cheaper. Credit: Getty Images Gartner has updated its forecasts for IT spending this year with a downward projection, but it’s not necessarily due to declining sales. It’s because the strengthening U.S. dollar is driving prices down and undercutting previous predictions. Overall spending is expected to increase by 1.1% over 2018, to $3.79 trillion, down from a prediction of 2.8% growth made in January. “Currency headwinds fueled by the strengthening U.S. dollar have caused us to revise our 2019 IT spending forecast down from the previous quarter,” said John-David Lovelock, research vice president at Gartner, in a statement. “Through the remainder of 2019, the U.S. dollar is expected to trend stronger, while enduring tremendous volatility due to uncertain economic and political environments and trade wars.” Lovelock further said, “In 2019, technology product managers will have to get more strategic with their portfolio mix by balancing products and services that will post growth in 2019 with those larger markets that will trend flat to down. Successful product managers in 2020 will have had a long-term view to the changes made in 2019.” The impact is pretty strong. Gartner sees the data center systems segment turning negative for the year. It had projected a 4.2% increase this year, but now it now says data center purchasing will decrease by 2.8% to $204 billion. What’s causing the drop in IT spending? The decline in IT spending is due to the U.S. dollar driving lower average selling prices (ASPs) in the server market, along with price drops in component costs, Gartner said. In particular, the memory market is in a price freefall, so standard and NAND flash memory are a lot cheaper. Another factor in the decline of prices is that servers are increasingly bought by cloud companies, which are more likely to buy cheaper original design manufacturer (ODM) equipment from companies such as Supermicro and Inspur. Enterprise IT spending is expected to continue to shift from traditional on-premises offerings to the cloud, which will drive a 7.1% growth in the enterprise software market to $427 billion. Gartner expects increased growth for the infrastructure software segment to be a particular driver, especially with integration platform as a service (iPaaS) and application platform as a service (aPaaS). Worldwide IT spending is projected to total $3.79 trillion in 2019, an increase of 1.1% from 2018, according to Gartner. So, no one in the enterprise IT space risks going out of business any time soon. Related content news analysis AMD launches Instinct AI accelerator to compete with Nvidia AMD enters the AI acceleration game with broad industry support. First shipping product is the Dell PowerEdge XE9680 with AMD Instinct MI300X. By Andy Patrizio Dec 07, 2023 6 mins CPUs and Processors Generative AI Data Center news analysis Western Digital keeps HDDs relevant with major capacity boost Western Digital and rival Seagate are finding new ways to pack data onto disk platters, keeping them relevant in the age of solid-state drives (SSD). By Andy Patrizio Dec 06, 2023 4 mins Enterprise Storage Data Center news Omdia: AI boosts server spending but unit sales still plunge A rush to build AI capacity using expensive coprocessors is jacking up the prices of servers, says research firm Omdia. By Andy Patrizio Dec 04, 2023 4 mins CPUs and Processors Generative AI Data Center news AWS and Nvidia partner on Project Ceiba, a GPU-powered AI supercomputer The companies are extending their AI partnership, and one key initiative is a supercomputer that will be integrated with AWS services and used by Nvidia’s own R&D teams. By Andy Patrizio Nov 30, 2023 3 mins CPUs and Processors Generative AI Supercomputers Podcasts Videos Resources Events NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe