Saturday, February 1, 2020

U.S. Internet Access Actually is Not Slow or Expensive

About 91 percent to 92 percent of U.S. residents have access to fixed network internet access at speeds of at least 100 Mbps, according to Broadband Now. 


Some 61 percent of U.S. residents have access on stand-alone plans at $60 a month or less. It is more difficult to tell what prices most consumers pay as so many customers buy service bundles where the cost of internet access is lower than the stand-alone price. 

According to one estimate, 51 percent of customers with internet access between 100 Mbps and 249 Mbps were on discount plans. Of customers with service faster than 250 Mbps, 65 percent of accounts were on discounted rates. Basic rate accounts offering 55 Mbps to 99 Mbps also were on discounted plans about 54 percent of the time. 

Some estimate the typical price is about $60 a month. That matches Comcast’s reported cash flow per unit of $63. 


Many will complain that these prices are “too high,” but U.S. internet access prices are part of total telecommunications spending of less than two percent of gross domestic product, less than in Japan and South Korea but more than in Europe. 


The Whole Point of Deregulation is to Cause Incumbents to Lose Market Share

The global telecommunications industry was for a hundred years a slow-moving utility business that changed very little from year to year. The change from monopoly to competition, starting in the mid 1980s, increased the tempo of change, but the industry still is recognizable from what it was 35 years ago, though its products have changed. 

On the other hand, the whole point of deregulation is to shift market share from incumbents to challengers, and that has happened, virtually everywhere. In many markets, and for some products, incumbents no longer are the market share leaders. 

Think of how much the WAN connectivity business has changed. Three decades ago, wide area networks were built and operated by telecom companies. Today, the primary suppliers are third parties--often big end users--and new entrants, not legacy telcos. 

Traffic demand also now is shaped by app providers and their data centers. 

The drivers of global WAN capacity now are video content and internet applications supported by hyperscale data centers owned by major app providers. Those enterprises also build, own and operate their own global WAN networks, paid for by revenues from their app, content and device businesses. 


<50,000
50,000–100,000
100,000–500,000
500,000–1 million
1–5 million
>5 million
Bandwidth, Megabits per second (Mbps)
Tota...

The function of the WAN remains, but it is an internal cost of doing business for some major app, commerce or content providers. Just as important, such private WANs no longer represent as much of a WAN services revenue stream. 


One way of looking at traffic flows is that traffic will flow between the hyperscale data centers operated by a relatively few firms, as well as between those data centers and users of apps hosted at those locations. 


Friday, January 31, 2020

What Will Telecom Look Like in 20 years?

Few, if any, executives or managers ever really looks out two decades to shape today’s business decisions. It simply is not rational to do so. Futurists, otten wrong as much as 80 percent of the time, must do so. 

“The insurance, transportation, and retail industries will either not exist in 20 years or will have changed completely due to artificial intelligence, innovation, and other factors,” according to Dave Jordan, global head, consulting and services integration at Tata Consultancy Services.

With the caveat that the odds of being substantially correct are perhaps lower than 20 percent, what might today’s communications business look like in 20 more years? 

The TCS analysis works something like this: auto insurance will not be needed as much when autonomous vehicles reduce so many accidents, when not so many people own their own personal vehicles, and when 3D printing allows quick and cheaper repairs to vehicles. 

3D printing will enable so much personalization and customization that “mass market retailing” is unnecessary, TCS suggests. 

Applying the same sort of logic to the telecommunications industry, at least directionally, is not so hard. As the functions of software, firmware or communications often are embedded into the use of product, so larger parts of the “connectivity function” are likely to be subsumed into other products.

As tires are part of the value of a new car, and transmission was embedded in the consumption of over the air TV, so a growing part of the value of tomorrow’s products might include embedded communications, and be purchased as part of some other product.

As the cost of public Wi-Fi (and the cost of the WAN that connects it) is embedded in the cost of goods sold by retailers, as the value of hotel room Wi-Fi (and the cost of the WAN access), so the cost of connectivity might increasingly be bundled with the cost of other products (safety, transportation, content, devices). 



AT&T, Comcast and Verizon Collectively Generate about $212 Per Home Passed, Annually

It is not easy to run a big fixed network business these days. As Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg said on Verizon’s fourth quarter earnings call, Verizon faces a “secular decline in wireline business that is continuing.” 

Secular means a trend that is not seasonal, not cyclical, not short term in nature. For multi-product companies such as AT&T, Verizon and Comcast, it can be argued that "everything other than the core business is doing a lot worse than the core business, both at Comcast and at AT&T and at Verizon.

One supposes the “core business” for AT&T and Verizon is mobility, while the core business for Comcast is fixed network broadband. The conclusion analyst Craig Moffett of MoffettNathanson reaches is that AT&T, for example, will have to be broken up. 

The suggestion to focus on the “core business” often produces financial returns when conglomerates are broken up. 

What might not be so clear is how breaking up triple play assets, or separating mobile from fixed assets necessarily helps the surviving connectivity assets to generate greater revenue and profits. 

Is it logical to assume that the AT&T and Verizon businesses would all do better if the fixed network assets, mobile assets and media assets were separated? Would Comcast’s financial returns be better if the content assets were separated from the fixed network, or the video entertainment business separated from the network connectivity business?

Given the “secular decline” of the fixed network business, could a fixed services only approach (internet access, voice and perhaps video entertainment) actually work, at the scale the separated Comcast, AT&T or Verizon assets would represent?

The issue is not whether a small firm, with a light cost structure, might be able to sustain itself in some markets selling internet access alone, or internet plus voice. The issue is whether an independent AT&T fixed network or an independent Verizon fixed network business could sustain itself. 

The answers arguably are tougher than they were twenty years ago, when a telco and a cable company faced each other with a suite of services including internet access, voice and entertainment video. Basically, they traded market, at best. Telcos ceded voice share, but cable lost some video share, and both competed for internet access accounts. 

At a high level, the strategy was that both firms would trade share, but by selling three services on one network, instead of one service on each network, the numbers would still be workable.

But the math gets harder when every one of those three services faces sustained declining demand and falling prices. 

That being the case, it is hard to see how a sustainable business can be built on connectivity services alone, especially for either AT&T or Verizon. Perhaps Comcast could survive with a strong position in internet access and smaller contributions from voice and possibly video entertainment. 

In the fourth quarter of 2019, Comcast Cable generated $14.8 billion in revenue.  Total revenue that quarter was $28.4 billion. 

Verizon’s fixed network business, on the other hand, generated about $7 billion, out of total revenue of nearly $35 billion. 

AT&T had fourth quarter 2019 total revenue of nearly $47 billion. AT&T’s fixed network, plus satellite TV, generated about $18 billion in revenue.  AT&T’s “fixed network plus satellite” operations generate 38 percent of revenue. Perhaps $8 billion or so of that revenue comes from the satellite operations. So the fixed network business might generate $10 billion in revenue. 

Comcast Cable passes 58 million consumer and business locations. Comcast has 26.4 million residential high-speed internet customers, 20.3 million residential video customers and 9.9 million voice accounts, generating average cash flow (EBITDA) of $63 per unit. 

At a high level, the problem is that Verizon’s entire fixed network operation generates about 20 percent of total revenue. AT&T’s fixed network generates perhaps 21 percent of revenue. Comcast, which has a small mobile operation, generates close to $15 billion from the fixed network. 

And that, it seems to me, illustrates the problem. Comcast, AT&T and Verizon all put together generate about $32 billion in fixed network revenue, and revenue is likely to remain flat to negative. 

Verizon homes passed might number 27 million. Comcast has (can actually sell service to ) about 57 million homes passed.

AT&T’s fixed network represents perhaps 62 million U.S. homes passed. 

CenturyLink never reports its homes passed figures, but likely has 20-million or so consumer locations it can market services to. 

Looking only at Comcast, AT&T and Verizon, $32 billion in annual fixed network revenue is generated by networks passing about 146 million U.S. homes. That works out to about $212 per home passed, per year. 

How that is sustainable is a clear challenge.

Thursday, January 30, 2020

Analysys Mason 2020 Predictions

Is Private 5G a Threat to Mobile Operator Revenue?

Some believe private 5G or private 4G networks are an elephant in the room, a big potential threat to public network revenue models. Others see an opportunity to supply enterprises with private networks. 

A couple of proven models might clarify the potential upside and downside. Generally speaking, private networks have not historically been a threat to service provider revenue models. The examples include both cabled local area networks and Wi-Fi. In each case, the public network terminates at the side of the building and the internal network is owned and operated by the occupants. 

The LAN business always has been separate from the telecommunications business, and has either stimulated or been neutral in terms of revenue. 

To be sure, an obvious potential business model might have a telco operating a services integration business, building, operating and maintaining either cabled LANs or Wi-Fi networks on behalf of enterprise clients. This has proven difficult, both for telcos and a few firms that have tried to build a business doing so. 



Boingo, arguably the largest third-party supplier of enterprise venue Wi-Fi and neutral host mobile access in the U.S. market, has total annual revenue in the range of $275 million. As significant as that might be for many firms, it indicates a total addressable market simply too small to support a tier-one telco effort. 

In fact, in recent years, Boingo revenue growth has shifted to supplying distributed antenna system access to venues for mobile service providers. Basically, Boingo supplied the indoor or premises radio network for mobile phone service. 

Another example is the business private branch exchange (enterprise telephony) business. Telcos historically have preferred not to operate in this segment of the business, as gross revenue and profit margins are close to non-existent. Instead, ecosystem partners including system integrators and interconnect firms have occupied this niche in the market. 

The enterprise PBX market has not been large enough, or profitable enough, for the typical telco to pursue. 

Network slicing provides a new wrinkle, however. In principle, a private 5G enterprise network could in turn use a network slice for WAN connectivity. That still leaves the issue of which entity owns and operates the premises network, however. In principle, a network slice is simply another way the enterprise buys a connectivity service, while maintaining its own private local network.

The big takeaway might be that private network markets are not large enough for most telcos to pursue. The costs of building and operating a Wi-Fi network, enterprise telephony or indoor mobile network are not prohibitive for enterprises. So the opportunity for managed services might not be so large for any would-be third party suppliers. 

It remains to be seen whether private 4G or private 5G networks could break from those prior models. But suppliers will have to explore the possibilities. So Ericsson and Capgemini have partnered to explore their opportunities in the private 4G and private 5G network area. 

Telia in Sweden os the first service provider to join Capgemini and Ericsson looking for commercial projects in the Scandinavian market. 

In terms of business models, Ericsson might hope to sell infrastructure and software. Capgemini might look to provide both consulting, implementation and operation. Telia might seek mostly to garner the access revenues. 

But note the possible roles: private 4G or private 5G can be undertaken directly by an enterprise, or might be outsourced to a third party. The issue is whether the third parties might include telcos operating in the system integrator role, or whether that function will, as past patterns suggest, mostly be an opportunity for third parties. 

Beyond that, there is the question of how big the market opportunity might be for third parties. History might suggest the opportunity for telcos is limited, while the upside for third party integrators ultimately also is somewhat limited. 

Most large enterprises ultimately find that the cost of using a managed service provider exceeds the cost of building and operating a private local network. At low volume, a managed service often is more affordable. Those advantages often disappear at volume, however. That is why many enterprises still find they save money by operating their own LANs and PBXes. 

The takeaway might be that private 4G and private 5G will ultimately not prove to be disruptive for mobile service providers, even if significant private network activity occurs.

Wednesday, January 29, 2020

NTT Global Data Centers Execs on What is Happening in Data Center Market



Joe Goldsmith,NTT Global Data Centers, Americas  Chief Revenue Officer and Steve Manos, NTT Global Data Centers, Americas Vice President of Global Accounts talk about what they see happening in the data center market and what NTT is doing to meet customer requirements. 

Directv-Dish Merger Fails

Directv’’s termination of its deal to merge with EchoStar, apparently because EchoStar bondholders did not approve, means EchoStar continue...