The global telecom industry performed pretty much as it always does during the recent recession. Basically, revenue growth continued at low single digits, overall. As always is the case, some industry segments fared better than others, but consumer demand for communications and entertainment video services was steady.
Some might wonder whether some clear signs of consumer frugality will affect growth rates for some time to come, but even that is not the big issue.
The big issue is that wired communications is an industry with a cost structure too high for expected revenues over time, so cost cutting must continue and network operations must become even more efficient than they have, up to this point.
Ovum researchers point out that "the economic downturn hasn’t resulted in the downward pressure on telco top lines that many expected."
But Ovum researchers also point out that "revenue growth is in decline for many mature market operators, and slowing for those in emerging markets."
“Market saturation, increased competition and regulatory intervention on roaming and termination rates won’t disappear just because the economy picks up”, says Ovum Principal Analyst Clare McCarthy.
Telcos are cutting operating expenses and capital investment. They are also accelerating employee early retirement programs and stockpiling cash. Many telcos in fact are emerging from the downturn with healthier balance sheets than when they entered, as well as significant cash balances, Ovum says.
Monday, March 15, 2010
Recession Not the Issue, Structural Is What Challenges Telcos
Labels:
Ovum,
recession,
telcos,
wireline market forecast
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
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