Showing posts sorted by date for query pandemic access speed. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query pandemic access speed. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Thursday, April 9, 2020

Will Canada Telecom Revenue Drop 1% in 2020 Because of Covid?

It might be rational to expect connectivity provider revenue to dip in the wake of the economic shutdowns imposed to combat the Covid-19 pandemic. That might not prove to be the case. 


A better assumption is that markets growing before the pandemic will see reduced growth, but not a dip in growth. Markets that were flat will probably simply remain flat. Markets that were contracting before will contract afterwards. 


That might make sense two years after 2020, some might argue, but will not apply to 2020. After all, the economic impact of efforts to defeat the pandemic will lead to major dips in economic activity and employment. There will be significant numbers of business bankruptcies. All that should reduce aggregate demand for communications services. 


That appears to drive analyst thinking at IDC Canada. Analysts expect that the telecom services market will contract by almost C$2 billion with the overall revenue expected to fall to C$47.9 billion – a negative -0.8 percent decline from a year earlier. 


“As recently as December 2019, we had projected positive 3.2 per cent annual growth for the sector in 2020,” they say. By comparison, IT spending in Canada is expected to decline by negative five percent in 2020, according to IDC Canada's most recent forecast estimate.


The greatest adverse impact on telecom spending forecasts is the projected number of business failures, IDC predicts. The contrary argument would be that communications spending, overall, did not seem to dip in the wake of the great recession of 2008, but only flattened. 

source: IDC 


A dip in revenue might seem the obvious call, as consumption and consumer spending fell virtually across the board in the great recession of 2008, and the virtual shutdown of large parts of the economy in response to the Covid-19 pandemic would seem likely to produce something similar, if not worse. 


But that does not directly translate into consumer, small business and enterprise spending on communication services and products. According to TeleGeography Research, revenue growth  slipped from about seven percent annually to one percent in 2009, returning to about three percent globally in 2011. The recession affected revenue growth, but there was no dip in total revenues, overall


Underlying revenue trends will persist, in other words, within a couple of years after the event. Markets that were growing before will continue to grow. Markets that were contracting will continue to contract. Markets with slightly-positive growth will continue to grow slowly. 


Looking at cash flow earned by Canadian communications firms, total cash flow has been dropping since 2015, according to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. In terms of revenue, mobile and internet access revenues (not profits, necessarily) have been growing since about 2014, while all other revenue sources have shrunk. 



source: CRTC


One important input for the mobility business that drives overall revenue is the role played by device sales, with a 43 percent compound annual growth rate between 2014 and 2018, while voice and messaging revenues actually had negative rates of growth, with data services, roaming and other sources were up less than six percent. 


Component

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Growth (%)

2017-2018

CAGR (%)

2014-2018

Basic voice

8,665.5

8,689.0

8,834.3

9,219.7

7,747.3

-16.0

-2.8

Long-distance

880.4

656.1

547.0

481.9

417.4

-13.4

-17.0

Paging

17.3

12.6

11.1

8.9

9.0

1.1

-15.1

Terminal equipment (including handheld devices)

1,673.7

2,129.8

1,911.1

1,896.1

6,961.9

267.2

42.8

Data

8,672.6

10,034.9

10,980.5

11,832.4

10,857.0

-8.2

5.8

Roaming and other

1,035.7

1,001.9

960.0

1,047.2

1,125.0

7.4

2.1

Data, roaming, and other – subtotal

9,708.3

11,036.8

11,940.4

12,879.6

11,982.0

-7.0

5.4

Total

20,945.2

22,524.3

23,243.9

24,486.2

27,117.7

10.7

6.7

source: CRTC


In other words, perhaps Canada is a market where revenues and profits had been dropping before the impact of Covid-19. A dip in 2020 revenues, as a temporary impact, ignores the preceding trend, which was downward. Again, the point is that the underlying preexisting trend prevails, after the temporary Covid-19 effect in 2020. 


Telecom service provider revenues did not change much in the wake of the great recession of 2008. In fact, according to some studies, U.S. consumer spending on communications actually grew, overall, in the wake of the Great Recession, for example. 


Some surveys found that device purchases slowed during the recession. But some surveys also found consumers willing to make other tradeoffs to keep their broadband, mobile and video subscription services. There was, in other words, less willingness to cut high speed access than other services, for example.


The point is that service provider revenues might not fall, though growth might be reduced to zero. In fact, some studies show that global revenue continued to grow even during the recession of 2008. 

 

IDC Canada says the fixed network voice, which has been a shrinking market, remains the worst-performing segment under all scenarios because of continued mobile and internet substitution, IDC says. However, long-distance revenue gains might be “major” gains from use of toll-free long-distance conferencing.


Wide area networking services could be affected by business failures, while internet access “will be one of the most insulated markets.” 


Mobile services, which account for almost half of telecom revenue in Canada, remain essential, and likely might see some roaming revenue loss, but not much other downward pressure, the analysts believe.


Monday, March 30, 2020

Microsoft Sees 775% Increase in Cloud Services Demand

Microsoft says there has been  a 775 percent increase in demand for its cloud services in regions enforcing social distancing and/or shelter-in place due to the COVID-19 coronavirus. Use of the collaboration tool Teams spiked up to 900 million meeting and calling minutes daily in a single week, for example. Windows Virtual Desktop usage has grown more than three times. .

Government use of public Power BI data visualization software to share COVID-19 dashboards with citizens has surged by 42 percent in a week, Microsoft says. So how are global access networks holding up? 

Despite significant increases in internet access demand caused by stay-at-home policies forced by the Covid-19 pandemic, global internet access performance is holding up. There are some speed reductions, but average speeds arguably are higher than four months ago, in many markets, including Australia.

Speeds are flat in Canada, the United States, Mexico, Japan and Malaysia; slower in India; higher in China. 


Friday, March 27, 2020

Consumer Spending on Connectivity Might Surprise You, Even in Recession

It is easy enough to predict that consumer, smaller business and enterprise spending will fall if the world falls into recession in 2020. That would be in line with findings that consumption and consumer spending fell virtually across the board in the Great Recession.  

But that does not directly translate into consumer, small business and enterprise spending on communication services and products. 

Telecom service provider revenues did not change much in the wake of the Great Recession of 2008. In fact, according to some studies, U.S. consumer spending on communications actually grew, overall, in the wake of the Great Recession, for example. 

Some surveys found that device purchases slowed during the Great Recession. But some surveys also found consumers willing to make other tradeoffs to keep their broadband, mobile and video subscription services. There was, in other words,  less willingness to cut high speed access than other services, for example.

In fact, some surveys found consumers would rather abandon their mobile service than give up fixed high speed access. Consumers have indicated they would give up other products as well to keep their broadband access.

If they had to give up one service  (video entertainment, mobile, broadband), U.K. consumers would ditch video (49 percent) or mobile (30 percent) before their fixed network broadband connection (two percent), a survey of  more than 10,000 U.K. consumers found, for example.

The point is that high speed access arguably is highly resilient in a recession, and arguably the most-valued service, perhaps even be more valued than mobility. But mobility likely would rank as among the next most important service.

By some studies, consumer spending on mobile devices increased during the Great Recession of 2008 and spending also increased for communication services. That pattern hasn’t changed.

It does not seem that there was much recession impact on subscription video entertainment spending, though some consumers might have dropped a premium channel in favor of expanded basic service.

So despite fears, it is likely that overall revenue will not change that much in the wake of the expected Covid-19 recessions, either. 

One reason is that consumer spending on communications is relatively fixed. As data gathered by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development suggest, developed nation spending by consumers was remarkably consistent in the few years after the 2008 recession. 

Still, operators will be prudent, given growing expectations that the global economy now appears headed for negative growth in 2020 because of the Covid-19 pandemic, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit. 

Three years after the 2008 Great Recession, many still were noting reduced revenue growth in some regions. The caveat is that those areas arguably also had secular revenue issues that might have been masked by the effects of the Great Recession. It is likely that revenue trends were shaped by both consumer and enterprise spending, arguably benign in the former case, but more pronounced in the enterprise customer segment. 

Growth Forecasts, G20 countries in 2020
Real GDP growth
(% in 2020)
Real GDP growth
(% in 2020)
Previous forecast
(before outbreak)
Argentina
-6.7
-2
Australia
-0.4
2
Brazil
-5.5
2.4
Canada
-1.3
1.8
China
1
5.9
France
-5
1
Germany
-6.8
0.9
India (2020/21 fiscal year)
2.1
6
Indonesia
1
5.1
Italy
-7
0.4
Japan
-1.5
0.4
South Korea
-1.8
2.2
Mexico
-5.4
1.1
Russia
-2
1.6
Saudi Arabia
-5
1
South Africa
-3
1.4
Turkey
-3
3.8
UK
-5
1.1
US
-2.8
1.7
Global (market exchange rates)
-2.2
2.3

The last two big recessions of note happened in 2001 and 2008. The issue now is whether the recession caused by economic shutdown for health reasons because of Covid-19 is going to be better, the same or worse than the great recession of 2008 or the collapse of the internet bubble in 2001, for example. 

The “same as” or “worse than” scenarios would be multi-year, perhaps half-decade long events. 

In a 2014 analysis, EuroMonitor noted that “the speed of the recovery from the 2008 global financial crisis has been unusually slow,” compared to recoveries from previous recessions. In the U.S. market, for example, gross domestic product per person did not recover to 2007 levels until 2012, four years after the 2008 great recession. 

GDP Per Working Age Person in Advanced Economies since 2007



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