Thursday, October 22, 2015

Enhancing Competition Sometimes Decreases Investment

Perhaps there are instances where government policies can both stimulate competition and investment. That arguably was the case when the Telecommunications Act of 1996 was first passed, for example, legalizing competition in U.S. local access markets that had been sanctioned local monopolies until that point.

As a historical matter, investment climbed at the same time as competition bloomed. Looking at cable TV capital investment, there was a huge run-up in investment after the Act was passed allowing cable TV companies to create new roles as the most-significant new providers of consumer voice and Internet access services.

After reaching a peak, investment later declined to levels that are generally higher than previously had been made. In that sense, an argument can be made that both competition and investment were enhanced, over the medium to long term.

On the other hand, one might also argue that the higher levels of investment have little to nothing to do with legacy services, and everything to do with new services that might, or might not, have been dependent on the Telecom Act.

It is plausible, perhaps even certain, that investment levels were hiked to support new revenue streams based on the Internet, and had nothing to do with the deregulation of voice services.


In other instances, policymakers often face tougher choices. Policies that promote competition might increase investment in the short term, but also might depress investment in the long term, if investments in a specific industry consistently lag investments elsewhere.

In other words, whatever the near term impact of any policy decision, long term investment will flow to where firms believe returns are higher, and decrease in any areas where companies believe returns will fall, or are slim and in danger of reaching zero.

Something along those lines seems to be happening in India, where the Department of Telecom (DoT), to preserve competition, has decided to maintain existing rules about the maximum amount of spectrum any single provider can use.

Those rules will prevent several of the larger mobile service providers from rationalizing their spectrum holdings in ways that lead to lower costs.

The DoT decision means larger telcos will not be able to share spectrum, or trade spectrum.

Under the existing rules, a telecom operator cannot hold more than 25 per cent of total spectrum assigned to all companies in a circle and over 50 per cent of total spectrum assigned in a particular frequency band.

To be sure, the ultimate impact on investment is not entirely clear. Service providers always have multiple tools for increasing capacity, and one way to do so is to build more cells, with smaller coverage radius.

Prevented from adding more spectrum by trading or sharing, service providers might well be forced to invest in additional cell sites. On the other hand, service providers might conclude the faster route is to buy out competitors, thus adding their networks and spectrum. That might mean less investment in new facilities, but also less competition.

Is U.S. Mobile Operator Capex Growing, or Not?

Service provider capital spending trends are important for any number of reasons. Aside from the immediate relevance for firms who supply infrastructure, such trends offer clues about service provider strategy.

Quite often, spending ramps up when a next-generation network platform is being deployed, when competition heats up or a major new revenue source requires such investment.

Spending often ramps down when a network build is finished, when a major recession or other financial disturbance pinches revenues or when service providers decide to momentarily shift resources elsewhere (acquisitions; major spectrum purchases or required investment elsewhere in the business).

Sprint and AT&T offer examples.

AT&T plans on significantly lower capital investment over the next few years. In some part, that is because AT&T has finished its fourth generation network build, is deploying capital to make acquisitions, and likely is conserving on capital for expected spectrum auction investments as well.

From the second quarter of 2013 to the end of the second quarter of 2014, AT&T spent on average $5.7 billion a quarter on network-related infrastructure. 

Since then, the average is $4.4 billion (excluding capital related to AT&T Mexico networks investment), representing a dip in U.S. capex of perhaps 21 percent. But some might argue that capex dipped for a year between 2014 and 2015 before resuming a typical profile.

Some might argue AT&T capex has not shrunk, but it has shifted to new locations outside the United States.

Sprint, on the other hand, after a similar slowdown in 2014, has hiked capex--as a percentage of revenue--to remedy network deficiencies, compared to other leading competitors. The key there is “revenue.” Sprint simply has less revenue available to offset any incremental move in capital spending.

On an aggregate industry-wide basis, U.S. mobile carriers have grown capex since about 2012. Given expected spending on additional spectrum--and new expected competitive threats--overall capex might remain at higher levels for some period of time.

As much as a rational mobile service provider executive might prefer to spend a lower percentage of revenue on capex, or even lower gross amounts, the market might continue to require relatively higher levels of investment.

The entry of Google Fi and the coming entry of Comcast into the mobile business are examples of how competition could change in the future, irrespective of any continuing market share battles between the four big national service providers.



Satellite Market Shows Classic Signs of Competitor Behavior in Deregulating Industries

Some trends are “evergreen” in the communications business, or have been so since the advent of deregulation, new technology and competition starting in the 1980s globally.

Among the recurring themes is pricing instability--or pricing wars--in virtually every segment of the business, driven by new competitors with disruptive price offers based on use of new technology.

So it is not surprising that U.K.-based satellite services provider Talia warns of pricing wars in many regional satellite markets.

“It is becoming a price war among satellite operators,” Alan Afrasiab, Talia CEO told Via Satellite. “We cannot make decisions to buy additional capacity or even renew capacity because we don’t know when the bottom price will be reached.”

“At the moment it is unstable, and it’s bad for everybody,” he said. “I think big satellite operators now realize the market needs lower prices, especially on Ku-band, simply because of the Ka-band prices and also some of the smaller operators that have been quite aggressive.”

High throughput satellites and Ka-band are two big influencers of price today, he said. Afrasiab said HTS is pushing prices down, and putting pressure on traditional Ku-band pricing. Anybody familiar with .

Shifts in demand towards the terrestrial networks also are happening, leading to a situation where “the satellite industry overall has less demand.”

None of those laments are unusual. One of the hallmarks of any market that formerly was a monopoly and then gradually is deregulated is the emergence of new competition, notably from outside the traditional industry boundaries.

One example might be the shift of capacity demand away from satellite to to terrestrial networks. New technology also often underpins new competition. So we see the growing level of competition from HTS and Ka-band competitors.

Virtually always, some new competitors attack using the “same product, lower price” marketing platform, and that also is a trend Talia notes. In response, Talia is moving to create a hybrid fixed and satellite business, an example of another common trend in deregulating markets, namely the emergence of new product niches and roles in a relatively undifferentiated market for services.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Comcast Begins Move into Mobile Services

The waiting is almost over: Comcast Corp. is planning to launch its own mobile service. As some of us recall, the deal called for an initial right to resell Verizon service, but later the ability to act as a mobile virtual network operator.

That suggests the first steps will involve Comcast bundling mobile service (still branded as “Verizon” service) with triple-play bundles. After a period of time, Comcast would then create an MVNO business, allowing Comcast to brand the service.

A market trial of a Comcast wireless service could begin six months after a notification to Verizon, which apparently has been made.

Comcast has the right to use Verizon as the underlying network provider as part of a sale of spectrum to Verizon in 2012. As part of that agreement, a consortium of cable companies led by Comcast sold nationwide spectrum licenses to Verizon for $3.6 billion and secured the rights to resell its wireless services.

Commercial service could start late 2016, some believe.

Verizon Chief Financial Officer Fran Shammo has said unnamed cable companies have informed the carrier they now want to execute the reseller part of the agreement.

“Obviously, the industry is moving,” Shammo said. “Cable is going to do what they’re going to do, and we’re going to do what we’re going to do.”

Comcast eventually would leverage its network of homespots and public Wi-Fi hotspots, connecting customers to such Wi-Fi hotspots whenever possible to reduce payments to Verizon for use of the mobile data network. Comcast alone has deployed perhaps 10 million such homespots.

It isn’t yet clear whether Comcast would want to start out that way, however, given the learning curve of becoming first a mobile reseller and then later a branded service provider.

AT&T, Verizon Video Strategies Fit Their Revenue Sources

Differentiating business strategies are among the key features of a global telecom business since the wave of privatization and deregulation starting in the 1980s. Where monopoly telecom service providers once looked remarkably alike, in terms of customer bases, products and strategies, they now are beginning to diverge.

In the U.S. market, some now say the clearest example of differentiation between Verizon Communications and AT&T lies in their approach to video entertainment services. Where AT&T bought DirecTV, increasing its exposure to linear TV distribution, Verizon purchased AOL and launched a mobile video service (Go90).

Actually, that divergence arguably is based on other earlier divergences. Verizon, with a smaller fixed network footprint, has become a mobile service provider with about 15 percent of revenues generated by all fixed network operations.

AT&T remains far more “balanced,” earning 44 percent of total revenue from fixed services. Given that profile, it makes sense for Verizon to focus on mobile video, and for AT&T to focus on linear video.

While DirecTV, as a satellite-delivered service, is not strictly “landline,” nor is it “mobile” service. Functionally, however, DirecTV will resemble a “fixed” service, sold to fixed locations.

Both company strategies, though, focus on the ability to sell an entertainment video services that matches its network assets (Verizon earns 85 percent of revenue from its mobile platform; AT&T earns 44 percent of revenue from fixed services).

Bharti Airtel, Idea Cellular Could Lose 5% of Profits from New Call Drop Rules

Bharti Airtel and Idea Cellular could lose up to five percent of their pre-tax profits as a result of new Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) rules about compensation to consumers for dropped mobile calls.

Under the new rules announced by TRA,, mobile users will get a compensation of Re 1 for every dropped call, starting on  January 1, 2016.

The thinking is that the penalties will be larger than actual earnings on many calls. Whether that is literally the case, or not, some of us might argue that billing costs will be a material factor.

In other words, the time and expense of verifying whether a specific refund is to be applied, and then applying the credit, will be larger than the profit margin on any specific call. Nor is it entirely clear that all “call drops” can be accurately measured.

Part of the difficulty is determining when a “dropped call” has occurred. That is a judgment call, to some extent.

The reason is the definition used by mobile operators is very different from what a customer understands as a dropped call, said Kartik Raja, founder and managing director of Phimetrics Technologies.

“When I can’t hear you and the line just goes mute, but my phone shows that the call is still on, from a network point of view it is not a call drop,” he said. “For the network, only when they receive a message saying the call is dropped, it is counted as a call drop.”

Phimetrics conducted a study of telecom voice services, which began by defining a dropped call from a customer’s point of view rather than use a telecom company’s definition.

Using that method–when two users can’t hear each other for more than 10 seconds–the dropped call rates of two percent and three percent looked more like five percent and 15 percent, respectively.

"We consider this regulation as hard to implement in the current form and expect telcos to contest this ruling,” said Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Dish Network Will Not Allow its Mobile Spectrum Assets to Fall to "Zero"

The only certainty, where it comes to what Dish Network might do with its mobile spectrum assets, is that the firm will never allow the value of those assets to fall to zero. Beyond that, almost any monetiztion strategy is conceivable.

Despite the difficulties, some analysts think Dish Network might finally move to create a mobile business by first striking a long-term spectrum leasing deal with Verizon before the start of the 600-MHz incentive auctions planned for the first quarter or second quarter of 2016.

In general, any such deal would have Verizon trading long-term spectrum rights obtained from Dish Network for turned-up mobile capacity Dish Network could use to launch its mobile service.

Another scenario is Dish creating a spectrum leasing company that supplies different spectrum assets to different customers, including Verizon, AT&T and Sprint.

Though one cannot completely discount Dish doing a deal of some sort with either T-Mobile US or Sprint, neither of those companies could easily consider any major cash deals, and neither company really needs more spectrum right now.

In principle, a spectrum deal, or creation of a spectrum leasing company, would not necessarily prevent Dish from inking other deals with other carriers. Dish might well require retail store support, for example.

Perhaps Dish’s business plan would combine both mobile and fixed access. About the only scenario not conceivable is that Dish Network would allow the value of its spectrum holdings to fall to zero.

And though any such deals are logically discrete from the upcoming 600-MHz incentive auction, any such deals would affect contestant interest in that auction.

In addition to the decision by Sprint to sit out the auctions entirely, removing a major bidder for the reserve spectrum, now Verizon is hinting that it sees less value in the 600-MHz bands, because it already relies on 700-MHz spectrum.

And Verizon’s thinking would definitely shape its need and willingness to bid in the 600-MHz auctions.

Verizon has said it does plan to bid for 600-MHz spectrum, but Verizon also seems to be signaling that it has other options, and might not bid as aggressively as some had thought likely.

To be sure, such statements might, aside from other reasons, be positioning tactics, designed in part to dampen expectations that Verizon would be forced to bid “whatever it took” to acquire spectrum in the 600-MHz auction.

Perhaps Verizon also is signaling that it is less interested in 600-MHz spectrum than some had hoped Verizon would be, perhaps tempering expectations of license sellers and containing prices.

On the other hand, such statements also signal that a potential deal with Dish Network for wholesale access to its spectrum at 2-GHz is perhaps more interesting. That might also dampen price expectations for 600-MHz spectrum.

"Higher frequency spectrum is capacity and that's really what we need at this point in time," said Fran Shammo, Verizon CFO.

But it also would be necessary for Verizon to conclude any such deals before the 600-MHz auctions start, to comply with anti-collusion rules.

Most mobile spectrum is valued on either its coverage or its capacity dimensions, the basic trade off being that lower-frequency spectrum is better for coverage, but less valuable for capacity, while higher-frequency spectrum is better for capacity than coverage.

Verizon arguably has a reasonable amount of “coverage” spectrum, but not so much “capacity” spectrum.



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