Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Liberty Global Bids for Kabel Deutschland

Germany's biggest cable operator Kabel Deutschland Holding AG has received an acquisition proposal from Liberty Global. Vodafone Group earlier had made a bid, which Kabel Deutschland initially rejected as "too low."

The move illustrates the growing wave of telecom mergers many expect to see unleashed, in part because conditions for consolidation in Europe are improving, because growth has stalled and because "growth by acquisition" is becoming the surest way to boost revenues. 

The other issue is that dealmaking has been muted in the wake of the Great Recession of 2008, as was the case following the collapse of so many firms in the Internet Bubble crash. History suggests activity will climb again as distance from the last recession grows.

                                     Global telecom deal volumes/deal values 2000–2010                                                                                                                                          Source: Thomson SDC Platinum

The "name of the game in the cable business is scale," Liberty Media Chairman John Malone says, referring to the need for yet another wave of consolidation in the U.S. and European     cable business. 

In part, the problem is that markets are more competitive, with other providers taking market share, and with more pressure on profit margins. 

As with any other market where margins are dropping, suppliers can compensate by increasing the volume of sales, which means more customer scale. 

In principle, the same dynamics are at work in other parts of the communications business as well, ranging from mobile services to rural telecommunications to competitive local exchange carrier and incumbent local exchange carrier markets. 

Apple and Samsung, for example, dominate profits in the smart phone industry, some would say because they also dominate market share. 

That relationship between market share and profits is one reason 
consolidation in the cable and other parts of the communications and video entertainment business will continue. 
                                                Deal values by transaction type 2000–2010
Source: EY Survey Why Capital Matters (2000-2009) and Thomson SDC Platinum (2010 data)

Monday, June 17, 2013

Chromebooks Getting Major Retail Support

Chromebooks now will be sold in more than 6,600 stores around the world, expanding beyond Best Buy and Amazon.com to Walmart and Staples. In the coming months select Office Depot, OfficeMax, and regional chains Fry’s and TigerDirect locations will begin selling Chromebooks, Google says. 

Walmart will be selling the Acer Chromebook in 2,800 stores across the United States for $199, starting this summer.

Staples will bring a mix of Chromebooks from Acer, HP and Samsung to every store in the United States, about 1,500 stores.

What is the Global Value of Wi-Fi? How Much More Would be Added by Additional Spectrum?

Each household globally already using Wi-Fi may derive a yearly benefit from Wi-Fi of $118 to $225 resulting in a total economic gain for all households of around $52 billion to $99 billion annually, a study commissioned by Microsoft suggests. 

In the absence of Wi-Fi, mobile operators would be forced to invest large sums in their 
networks or strictly curtail their users’ usage. 

Worldwide, approximately 150,000 to 450,000 new radio base stations would be needed to cope with world smartphone traffic in the absence of Wi-Fi. 

That suggests a savings of about $30 billion to $93 billion in a single year, given current rates of tower construction. 

A 40% yearly growth of data traffic to 2016 will require mobile operators to deploy an 
additional 115,000 extra sites, an increase of around 4% from today’s numbers. However, in 
the absence of Wi-Fi an additional 1.4 million macrocell sites, or 43% of the current total 
would be required. The difference in costs between the two scenarios is extremely large, 
$250 billion (NPV) – comparable to around one third of the total annual revenue of the 
telecommunications industry. Even the least expensive solutions involving femtocells or 

picocells would require an investment of $45 - $60 billion. 

Perhaps that is one way of illustrating the potential value of more extensive use of unlicensed spectrum. 

Many would argue that more spectrum--often licensed spectrum, but perhaps more crucially additional non-licensed spectrum--is needed to spur additional competition in the broadband access market (though some would argue competition in not everywhere the key problem at the moment).


In the case of smartphones and tablets, Wi-Fi carries 69 percent of total traffic. For 
traditional PCs and laptops, Wi-Fi is responsible for carrying 57 percent of total traffic, greater 
than the share of Ethernet connections and 3G data combined. 

Some 439 million households – 25 percent of all households worldwide – have home Wi-Fi networks. 

Without Wi-Fi the value of fixed broadband would be lower and would result in the disconnection of perhaps 50 to 114 million fixed broadband connections around the world. 



More Spectrum, and More Non-Licensed Spectrum is Needed

Many would argue that more spectrum--often licensed spectrum, but perhaps more crucially additional non-licensed non-licensed spectrum--is needed to spur additional competition in the broadband access market (though some would argue competition in not everywhere the key problem at the moment).

As always, perspectives hinge on any number of considerations including the ways such policies affect incumbents of all sorts, including the ability to secure capital to exploit available non-licensed spectrum, and the impact of licensing costs and access on the potential range of business models.

Investment has become a more important issue for many regulators given the growing uncertainty about traditional communications business models, combined with growing competition from network-based and over the top rivals.

On the other hand, even supporters of non-licensed spectrum approaches will note that unlicensed bands are less flexible if future needs change.

But some of us might argue that the value of the unlicensed approach is that it promotes experimentation and makes possible market entry into communications by providers that do not and cannot invest gobs of capital into their businesses.

In other words, most would agree that licensed approaches favor bigger companies, while unlicensed spectrum favors smaller companies, who can get into markets without investing in spectrum assets.

Some might also argue that unlicensed spectrum approaches traditionally have not gotten the serious attention of policymakers and regulators in many parts of the world where entrpreneurs might well leap into the ISP business if they were not required to pay for spectrum and comply with licensing requirements geared to tier one communications service providers.

80% Broadband Penetration in Western Europe

Almost 80 percent of homes in the EU-7 (France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and UK) buy broadband access services in 2013, Forrester Research says. 

U.S. broadband penetration is about 83 percent, according to a new report by the Center for the Digital Future. 

The main issue now is how long it will take for Internet penetration, virtually synonymous with broadband access, to reach comparable levels everywhere on the planet. It will.

Telefonica Denies Talk of a AT&T Takeover Bid

Telefónica says that it has not received "any approach, nor any indication of interest, neither verbal nor in written form, from any party."

The reported $93 billion (70 billion euros) acquisition effort by AT&T was said by one report to have been blocked by Spanish legislators.

Reports such as that of an AT&T bid for Telefónica can happen for all sorts of reasons, sometimes essentially as trial balloons by would-be dealmakers, sometimes only because firms engage in "what if" exercises.

Still, the rumors come as a merger wave is thought to be coming, in the European Union. 

Sunday, June 16, 2013

More Consolidation, for Cable and Everybody Else

The "name of the game in the cable business is scale," Liberty Media Chairman John Malone says, referring to the need for yet another wave of consolidation in the U.S. cable business. 

Until August 2009, the Federal Communications Commission had enforced a rule that no single U.S. cable company could serve  more than 30 percent of U.S. households. 

That limit mostly was an issue for Comcast, but Comcast decided to expand by getting into the programming side of the  business, rather than getting bigger "horizontally," by acquiring more cable TV systems. 

But growing competition in the business now puts a new premium on additional scale, Liberty Media apparently believes. 

In part, the problem is that markets are more competitive, with other providers taking market share, and with more pressure on profit margins. 

As with any other market where margins are dropping, suppliers can compensate by increasing the volume of sales, which means more customer scale. 

In principle, the same dynamics are at work in other parts of the communications business as well, ranging from mobile services to rural telecommunications to competitive local exchange carrier and incumbent local exchange carrier markets. 

Apple and Samsung, for example, dominate profits in the smart phone industry, some would say because they also dominate market share. 

That relationship between market share and profits is one reason consolidation in the cable and other parts of the communications and video entertainment business will continue. 
strategy analytics q1 smartphone profits


USbroadbandsubscribersQ12013

Chart courtesy of Stifel.
Chart courtesy of Stifel.

Directv-Dish Merger Fails

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