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Tuesday, August 22, 2023

What Affordable Connectivity Program Stats Might Suggest for Internet Access Demand

What business conclusions might be drawn from news that 20 million accounts now are active as part of the Federal Communications Commission’s Affordable Connectivity Program? Probably a quarter of the customer base will prefer to buy less-costly, lower-performance services.


That has immediate business implications for suppliers of fixed wireless services and all internet service providers able to sell lower-speed services at lower prices.


Consider that there are about 123 million to 127 million “consumer and small business” accounts included in counts of “home broadband” subscriptions. 


By most estimates, small businesses represent between 10 percent and 12 percent of those “home broadband accounts.” So for purposes of evaluating the consumer portion of the home broadband market, consider that there might be at least 111 million active accounts, using the FCC’s latest figures. 


If 20 million of those accounts qualify for ACP support, then about 22 percent of the home broadband buyer base is likely to opt for less-expensive service plans. 


Home Broadband Accounts

Small Business Accounts

Study

Year Published

Publishing Venue

126.8 million

15.9 million

Federal Communications Commission (FCC)

2022

FCC

125.1 million

15.5 million

BroadbandNow

2023

BroadbandNow

123.4 million

15.2 million

Statista

2023

Statista


Those figures do not include customers who opt to use mobile internet access as their only form of home internet access. Keep in mind that home broadband accounts are based on service to locations, where mobile-only internet access is based on service to persons. 


If the total U.S. population is about 340 million, and 88 percent of adults use mobile phones, that implies fewer than 299 million mobile phone users. Assume 15 percent of phone customers do not buy an internet access plan for their phones. Assume 10 percent of the population is too young to use a mobile subscription. 


That might imply only 224 million mobile internet access accounts in service. Then further assume 12 percent of phone users rely exclusively on their mobile phones for internet access. That might represent up to 27 million accounts. 


If half of those accounts might consider getting a lower-speed, lower-cost home broadband service, and if half of those live in the same household, then about 6.8 million additional accounts might, in principle, be added to the ranks of potential home broadband buyers.


So possibly 27 million home broadband accounts might be, in principle, candidates for lower-cost services, or about 24 percent of all homes. That is consistent with OpenVault findings that about 26 percent of U.S. customers buy home broadband at speeds of 200 Mbps or lower. 


source: OpenVault 


So one might argue that about a quarter of the home broadband market is value oriented,a  third is performance oriented and the rest are in the “reasonable speed for reasonable price” middle portion of the market. 


Mobile Exclusive Internet Access

Study

Year Published

Publishing Venue

15%

Pew Research Center

2021

Pew Research Center

13%

Federal Communications Commission (FCC)

2022

FCC

12%

BroadbandNow

2023

BroadbandNow

11%

Statista

2023

Statista


Households are eligible for the CP if the household income is at or below 200% of the Federal Poverty Guidelines, or if a member of the household meets at least one of the criteria below:

  • Received a Federal Pell Grant during the current award year;

  • Meets the eligibility criteria for a participating provider's existing low-income internet program;

  • Participates in one of these assistance programs:

    • Free and Reduced-Price School Lunch Program or School Breakfast Program, including at U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Community Eligibility Provision schools.

    • SNAP

    • Medicaid

      • Your Medicaid eligibility may be up for renewal. Learn more about how to renew.

    • Federal Housing Assistance, including:

      • Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) Program (Section 8 Vouchers)

      • Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA)/Section 202/ Section 811

      • Public Housing

      • Affordable Housing Programs for American Indians, Alaska Natives or Native Hawaiians

    • Supplemental Security Income (SSI)

    • WIC

    • Veterans Pension or Survivor Benefits

    • or Lifeline;

  • Participates in one of these assistance programs and lives on Qualifying Tribal lands:

    • Bureau of Indian Affairs General Assistance

    • Tribal TANF

    • Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations

    • Tribal Head Start (income based)


All of those criteria are associated with lower income levels.


Monday, August 14, 2023

Fixed Wireless Dominates U.S. Home Broadband Net Additions in 2Q

With the caveat that nobody knows how long the trend will hold, in the second quarter, home broadband account additions in the U.S. market were dominated by fixed wireless, according to the latest data from Leichtman Research Group. 


Of 841,000 net account additions, 893,000 accounts were added by fixed wireless providers. In other words, fixed network provider accounts actually declined, while fixed wireless grew. 


Skeptics always argue that, eventually, fiber connections will limit fixed wireless demand. Fixed wireless optimists tend to argue that enough capacity can continue to be added to sustain fixed wireless as a viable market offering for quite some time, and perhaps almost indefinitely in a percentage of markets. 


The business strategy would be to continue upgrading fixed wireless speeds, for example, to appeal to 20 percent of the market. In that scenario, the objective is not to match fiber-to-home speeds but only to support features most relevant for about 20 percent of the market that does not want to buy the fastest, or faster, tiers of service. 


In terms of geography, rural areas and out-of-region locations are likely to remain the places where fixed wireless makes most sense. In such geographies the cost to supply will be far lower than the cost of building new optical access networks. The leading exceptions might be markets where FTTH leased access is generally available. 


In the near term, new mid-band spectrum is likely to provide the needed capacity expansion. Long term, millimeter wave spectrum will be the key supplier of capacity growth. To be sure, small cell networks using low-band and mid-band spectrum will help, in some cases. 


Still, longer term, only millimeter and higher frequency spectrum will add enough capacity to allow fixed wireless offers to keep pace (again, preserving key appeal for about 20 percent of the market) with other fixed network alternatives. 


The big advantage of milliwave spectrum is capacity; the main drawback is coverage. That will pose a continuing issue for rural millimeter wave network deployments. The conventional thinking is that denser urban markets are where millimeter will continue to offer the most-interesting business cases: relatively high amounts of capacity in areas where distance is not a primary issue. 

 

source: ABI Research, RCR 


At least so far, fixed wireless has been, far and away, the clearest new use case for 5G.


Thursday, July 6, 2023

How Much FTTH Investment Will Prove Excessive?

Some observers might note that there have been periods of overinvestment in various connectivity sectors since 1995, and in data center capacity to a lesser extent. 


Subsea capacity and competitive local exchange carrier segments in the 1995 to 2001 period come to mind, as well as low earth orbit satellite systems in the early 2000s as well. 


Global Crossing, Level 3 Communications, 360Networks, NorthPoint Communications, and Winstar Communications were a few of the subsea or CLEC firms that went bankrupt. 


In 1998 Teledesic raised $9 billion in funding to launch a constellation of 288 satellites, but filed for bankruptcy in 2002. In 1999, Iridium launched a constellation of 66 satellites to provide global mobile satellite services and was bought out  by Globalstar in 2007.


In 2000, Orbcomm launched a constellation of 28 satellites to provide two-way data messaging services. The company survived as a small participant in the LEO business.


In the mobile segment, Metropcs, Nextel and VoiceStream declared bankruptcy about the same time. 


And though data center capacity has in the past briefly been overbuilt, demand has relatively quickly absorbed the supply. 


Data Center Market

Years

Degree of oversupply

Northern Virginia

2015-2017

20%-30%

Silicon Valley

2016-2018

15%-25%

Frankfurt

2017-2019

10%-20%

Singapore

2018-2020

5%-15%


Some might ask questions about the sustainability of many fiber-to-home business plans now underway in the U.S. market. In the past, firms have come to grief when they borrowed too much money, were overly optimistic about their sales and revenues and faced too much competition. 


Consider one scenario where overinvestment in FTTH proves troublesome. Keep in mind that investment to create facilities does not mean customer acceptance. Lumen, for example, sells FTTH to about 26 percent of locations passed. Verizon has peaked at just a bit over 40 percent, as have most other telcos with FTTH footprints. The typical pattern is lower take rates when service is launched, with higher terminal rates after three years of marketing in any single market.  


While revenue sources for some ISPs with extensive FTTH networks will include revenue from business customers and wholesale operations, many ISPs are looking at payback models anchored by home broadband services with monthly revenues between $50 to $80 a month. 


Whether you believe that is sustainable for an ISP with 80 percent or greater market share and other revenue sources, questions begin to grow as the terminal market share forecasts in competitive markets dip towards 20 percent or 30 percent. 


Though there is certain to be huge disagreement about such forecasts, one might argue that the home broadband market is moving towards a much-reduced role for fiber-to-home platforms and a heightened role for mobile and other wireless access technologies, as the number and types of connected devices grows, with greater reliance on mobile or untethered access, and increasing ability to leverage mobile network assets to support both mobile and fixed use cases. 


Some rival platform executives might be more optimistic about their chances of competing with FTTH. Most customers, for example, do not buy the fastest-available services but rather “good enough” services that cost less. Also, we should expect every platform to continue to increase provided speeds over time. 


Some observers might expect satellite access to remain at no more than 10 percent. And though FTTH should gain, so will mobile-only and fixed wireless. Perhaps most in the “things will change, but not drastically” camp believe that HFC share (cable operator) will decline as more customers buy FTTH instead. 


Platform

2023 Market Share

2030 Market Share

Fiber to Home

15%

20%

Hybrid Fiber Coax (HFC)

60%

50%

Fixed Wireless

5%

10%

Mobile-Only

15%

20%


Fiber supporters will argue that FTTH will do far better, eventually perhaps representing 40 percent share of market by 2030, as all fixed network ISPs shift to FTTH platforms, including cable operators. In such scenarios, perhaps FTTH holds 40 percent share (including share of telcos, cable and independent ISPs). HFC could drop to 30 percent while shares of the other platforms share the rest of the market. 


The real sensitivity in the model is how fast new FTTH lines can be added by 2030, compared to how fast cable operators can continue to upgrade HFC service, or themselves switch to FTTH. 


The argument for FTTH is that it is the only futureproof platform for internet access. And while that might prove correct. But it might be a longer transition than many now expect.


Thursday, June 29, 2023

NextLight Grabs 60-Percent Market Share Competing Against Lumen and Comcast

NextLight, the electrical utility owned internet service provider in Longmont, Colo. says it has gotten 60 percent take rates for its fiber-to-home service, with similar take rates among business customers, after gaining about 54 percent take rates after five years of operation. 


Should many other competitive ISPs achieve such success, incumbent telco and cable operator ISPs could face serious challenges. 


It has been conventional wisdom in U.S. fixed network markets that two competitors are a sustainable market structure, typically featuring one cable operator and the legacy telco, with market shares ranging between a 70-30 pattern (where the telco only has copper access)  to something closer to 60-40 as a rule (where the telco is upgrading to fiber access). 


Telcos hope for market shares approaching 50-50 as FTTH becomes the dominant access platform over time. 


The new issue is additional providers, ranging from municipal or utility-owned ISPs to independent ISPs, including independent ISP operations that cover only parts of a metro area. In a sense, that is the mass market or consumer version of the competitive local exchange carrier strategy adopted decades ago, where suppliers target business customers in major office parks or downtown core areas. 


The American Association of Public Broadband cites 750 municipal internet service provider networks in operation in the United States, mostly serving smaller communities. Not all have full retail operations, though. 


Chattanooga Electric Power claims 175,000 customers in the Chattanooga, Tennessee area. The next-largest 10 such ISPs have fewer customers, often because they are smaller population centers. 


  • City of Salem Electric Department (Oregon): 50,000

  • City of Longmont Power & Communications (Colorado): 40,000

  • Plum Creek Electric Cooperative (North Dakota): 35,000

  • Jackson Energy Authority (Tennessee): 25,000

  • City of Holyoke Municipal Light Department (Massachusetts): 20,000

  • City of Boulder Municipal Electric Utility (Colorado): 18,000

  • City of Dubuque Utilities (Iowa): 17,000

  • City of Lawrence Public Utilities (Kansas): 15,000

  • City of Lexington Utilities (Kentucky): 15,000

 

And other networks are launching in larger population centers. As with any set of contestants in any other industry, not all suppliers will succeed and not all will likely survive. Managerial skill still seems to matter, as do the other prosaic concerns such as managing debt burdens and picking the right areas to serve. 


Many for-profit ISPs now believe they have better opportunities in rural areas, for example, where a new fiber network can be “first” to serve the market. Up to this point few have attempted to compete in a major big city market. ISPs targeting operations in mid-size cities have generally only chosen to serve portions of their cities. 


The obvious broader issues are the roles and strategies traditional retail service providers can envision as their markets are reshaped by competition, new investors and virtualized or other roles beyond the traditional vertically-integrated model. 


The question naturally arises: how many of these new competitors will succeed, and what are the implications for sustainable market shares over time?


In a market with two significant suppliers, each serving the whole market, an ISP might require  market share of at least 30 percent to be sustainable. That has often been the pattern where a cable operator competes against a telco with copper-only access, where the available telco speeds are quite limited in comparison to a cable operator hybrid fiber coax network. In such cases, there is an order or magnitude or two orders of magnitude difference in top speeds. 


In a market with three significant suppliers, an ISP typically needs to have a market share of at least 20 percent to be sustainable, if competition across the full geography is envisioned. Such ISPs also tend to require more efficient operations. 


In a market with four significant suppliers, where we can assume as many as two of the four compete only in a portion of the metro market, an ISP typically needs to have a market share of at least 10 percent (of the full area potential market) to be sustainable, though ISPs serving only a portion of a metro area also probably need take rates higher than 10 percent in the areas they do choose to serve. 


If an independent ISP cannot get 20 percent to 30 percent take rates in its chosen geographical areas of coverage, it probably is not doing well. 


The best suppliers can take so much share from the incumbents (telco and cable) that severe damage to the incumbent business model is possible, turning those competitive areas into loss-making operations. 


A fixed network operator with sufficiently offsetting performance might survive actual losses in a few geographies. In fact, traditional monopoly fixed network suppliers expected permanent losses in rural areas, breakeven or slightly better performance in suburbs and most of the profits from operations in city cores. 


NextLight seemingly has avoided issues of cross-subsidization of internet access service by the electrical utility ratepayers, separating its financial operations from those of Longmont Power Company.


NextLight has its own board of directors, management team, and accounting system.


NextLight seemingly provides service “at cost,” plus a small margin to cover its operating expenses. The objective is to break even, rather than “making a profit.”


NextLight's network is physically separate from LPC's network, though critics might argue NextLight uses power company rights of way and other benefits of having a sponsor with an on-going business, which could translate to financial advantages. 


Others might argue there is some cross subsidy. There is a no-recourse surcharge on LPC's electric bills, used to fund the construction and operation of NextLight, and it is applied to all LPC customers, regardless of whether they subscribe to NextLight service.


That said, NextLight has gotten a legal opinion from the Colorado Attorney General's Office stating that NextLight is not engaging in cross-subsidization, and that the non-bypassable surcharge is a fair and reasonable way to fund the network. 


In fairness, what revenue-generating entity would not look to leverage its current assets to create new lines of business? Cable operators used their video subscription networks to create fully-functional telecom networks; use their fixed network to support their mobile service provider operations; extended their consumer networks to provide business-specific services; used their linear video customer base to leverage a move into content ownership. 


Telcos do the same, when trying to extend their core operations to new services. In the more-regulated era, they had to establish separate subsidiaries to enter non-regulated lines of business. That is less an issue in today’s largely-deregulated markets. 


The city of about 100,000 is about 30 miles north of Denver, so might be considered a suburb by some, a neighboring city by others. Using either characterization, population density varies quite substantially. 


The population density of Longmont, Colorado in its city core is 11,999 people per square mile while the population density of the outlying areas is 1,369 people per square mile  

 

Housing density and population density obviously are key indicators of potential access network cost and revenue possibility. Housing density enables and constrains home broadband market size, while population density is correlated with business revenue potential. 


To a large extent, housing and population density also affect network cost: the lowest-cost-per-passing networks can be built in dense areas while the most costly networks are in rural areas. 


Among U.S. internet service providers, the “average housing density is 400 locations per square mile, with Comcast sitting squarely on that level of density. Smaller telcos tend to serve more-rural areas and have housing densities an order of magnitude or two orders of magnitude less than the largest ISPs. 


Company

Housing Units

Average Housing Density (dwellings per square mile)

Verizon

58.2 million

1,500

AT&T

51.8 million

1,300

Lumen (formerly CenturyLink)

25.7 million

600

Charter

22.9 million

500

Comcast

19.5 million

400

Windstream

14.8 million

300

Brightspeed

1.9 million

40


At least historically, that explains why Verizon was early to invest in fiber to home facilities. It has the most-dense serving areas, so has the best economics. Only recently have many smaller and independent ISPs been able to make a business case for investing in FTTH in rural and exurban areas, though lots of small rural telcos have been doing so for years. 


Housing density

Cost per home passed

40 homes per square mile

$2,000

40 homes per square mile

$800

1,300 homes per square mile

$500


Figures of merit for FTTH construction might range from $1,000 to $1,250 per household at 400 homes per square mile but $1,500 to $2,000 per household at 40 homes per square mile, for example. 


At higher densities of 1,300 homes per square mile, costs might range from $500 to $750 per household. 


The business case also includes less revenue per account potential at lower densities as well. 


All that matters as attacking ISPs and infrastructure investors weigh their odds of success when competing with legacy service providers. To be sure,  FTTH payback models seem to have changed greatly since 2000. 


The economics of connectivity provider fiber to the home have always been daunting, but they are, in some ways, more daunting in 2022 than they were a decade ago. The biggest new hurdle is that expected revenue per account metrics have been cut in half or two thirds. That would be daunting for any supplier in any industry. 


These days, the expected revenue contribution from a home broadband account hovers around $50 per month to $70 per month. Some providers might add linear video, voice or text messaging components to a lesser degree. 


But that is a huge change from revenue expectations in the 1990 to 2015 period, when $150 per customer was the possible revenue target.  


You might well question the payback model for new fiber-to-home networks which assume recurring revenue between $50 and $70 per account, per month, with little voice revenue and close to zero video revenue; take rates in the 40-percent range; and network capital investment between $800 and $1000 per passing and connection costs of perhaps $300 per customer. 


In the face of difficult average revenue per account metrics, co-investment and ancillary revenue contributions have become key. Additional subsidies for home broadband also will reduce FTTH deployment costs. 


The point is that FTTH revenue models, and the ability to sustain a competitive ISP operation, either as an incumbent or attacker, now seem to make possible more competition than was previously thought possible. 


NextLight is a good example.


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