Friday, August 28, 2015

Philippines is Exception to the Rule that Duopoly Markets are Not Competitive

There is an exception to every rule, including the “rule” that telecom duopolies stifle robust competition. Some would point to cable TV companies and telcos in the U.S. market, but a better case is the Philippine telecommunications market, where just two providers compete aggressively.

The telecom industry in the Philippines is a duopoly, with PLDT and Globe Telecom being the two dominant players in the mobile market.

Local media company ABS-CBN Corp. is trying to become the third player in the country's mobile  industry, operating using wholesale facilities supplied by Globe.

In addition, Philippine-based conglomerate San Miguel Corp. has also expressed interest in entering the telecom market, and is in talks with Telstra in that regard.

PLDT is the market leader with a dominant market share in all segments (mobile, fixed line, and broadband), having 60 percent to 70 percent market share in all these segments.

Analysts at Standard & Poors consider the Philippines telecom market moderately to highly competitive.

The market is price sensitive, and subject to periodic bouts of intense price competition, typically features of competitive markets.

The new contestants face high hurdles. The maturing cellular market in the Philippines features penetration of 113 percent.

Smartphone penetration will reach about 35 percent by the end of 2015.
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Reliance Jio Market Entry Might Not Trigger Consolidation

The only certainty in India’s mobile market is that market share will change after Reliance Jio enters the market late in 2015. What might not change is the degree of market fragmentation, however.

Many believe the market will consolidate to a smaller number of providers after Reliance Jio enters the market. But that might remain difficult for several reasons. Some would question how much upside is gained by any acquisitions of the smallest providers, given caps on permissible market share and spectrum limit the “growth by acquisition” strategy.

The point is that even if suppliers think consolidation would be helpful, there are regulatory barriers to serious structural change.

The other likelihood, though, is that Increasing data consumption and growing average revenue per user should lift revenue growth in India's telecommunications industry at eight percent annually up to 13 percent annually over the next several years, according to Standard & Poors.


What Happens When an Incumbent's Core Strategy Goes Wrong

The current market status of the government-owned Bangladesh Telecommunications Company Ltd. (BTCL) provides one example of just how much the market share of a former incumbent carrier can fall.
With a declining base of less than a million connections, BTCL has shrunk to being mainly an infrastructure services provider, while Telenor--Grameenphone, Vimpelcom–Banglalink, and Axiata–Robi hold about 90 percent share of the mobile market of 126 million accounts.
Bharti Airtel–Airtel, Singtel–Citycell, and state-owned TeleTalk round the ranks of mobile providers.
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Generally speaking, analysts have suggested there are but a handful of strategies any former incumbent can choose, ranging from full wholesale on one end to roles that are application heavy at the other extreme.

Fundamentally, the options range from focusing on pipes or over the top apps, being a wholesale supplier of bandwidth and fundamental services or becoming a provider of over the top apps at retail.

Many tier one service providers rightly worry about the dangers of embracing the wholesale role. In addition to strategic choices, execution risk is a major issue, BTCL illustrates those dangers.

Competition and Regulation are Risks for Asia Telecom Firms

Telecom companies in the Asian region, including India, face regulatory risks and intense price competition that can undermine returns and investment, Standard & Poor's (S&P) Rating Services said.

Many emerging Asian telecom markets have strong growth prospects, based on large populations and growth of gross domestic product.
But competition is an issue, ranging from moderate to high levels, and concentrated market structures prevail.
However, in some emerging Asian telecom markets, such as India, regulatory constraints have restricted consolidation that would typically occur in more market-driven economies.
Emerging Asia's Competitive Intensity In The Telecom Industry
Country
Competitive intensity
Bangladesh
High
Pakistan
High
Sri Lanka
High
India
Moderate to High
Indonesia
Moderate to High
Philippines
Moderate to High
Thailand
Moderate to High
China
Moderate
Malaysia
Moderate
source: Standard & Poors

Regulatory risk varies, and is highest in Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Thailand. .

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In India, regulatory constraints have been a key barrier to market consolidation that could reduce competitive intensity, S&P says. “That said, we believe that more recent regulatory developments in India offer greater potential for market consolidation in the future.”

“While we believe that greater pricing rationality has returned to the Indian market in recent quarters after several years of stiff competition and margin pressure, the likely entry of Reliance Jio could substantially change the competitive landscape, especially for data services,” the ratings agency said.
In Malaysia, Telekom Malaysia's entry into the wireless market also could ramp up market competition in the next few years.
Although some markets are highly concentrated, they still exhibit a degree of competitive intensity typically associated with a more fragmented market structure. For example, in the Philippines, bouts of fierce price competition frequently occur, despite the country having one of the most concentrated telecom markets globally.
Still, GDP growth, and voracious appetite for data services will boost revenues across most of the region's telecom markets, S&P believes.

Several telecom operators are also pursuing new business segments such as cloud computing, exposing them to nontraditional, formidable
competitors.

Sprint Offers Free Year of Mobile Service to DirecTV Customers

Sprint thinks AT&T’s ability to bundle DirecTV with mobile service is a serious customer acquisition threat. So much so that Sprint is offering DirecTV customers a free year of Sprint mobile service.

The free year of service offer starts Friday, Aug. 28, and runs through Sept. 30, 2015,

DirecTV customers switching to Sprint--or existing Sprint customers--can take advantage of the promotion.

The offer for existing Sprint customers is available to customers adding a new line of service through Sprint Lease, iPhone Forever, Sprint Easy Pay1, or paying full retail price for a smartphone.

The free year of service includes unlimited talk, text and 2GB of data per line (up to five lines), while the devices are used on the Sprint network.

Customers are responsible for the one-time $36 activation fee and monthly taxes and surcharges.

For new customers, Sprint will pay off existing phone and contracts, up to $300 per line.

After the promotional period, customers will pay standard rates.

CDN Market Growing 26% Annually

The CDN market is estimated to grow from $3.7 billion in 2014 to $12.2 billion by 2019, at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 26.3 percent from 2014 to 2019, according to Marketsandmarkets.

In terms of regions, NA is expected to be the biggest market in terms of revenue contribution while Asia Pacific (APAC) is expected to experience increased market traction with high CAGRs, http://www.marketsandmarkets.com/PressReleases/cdn.asp

Other forecasts have called for annual growth between 16 percent and 25 percent.

According to Cisco, CDN traffic will represent about half of all Internet traffic in 2017, and a majority of traffic after that.

Much of that traffic will flow within specific metro areas, not across the long haul networks, as more content and app providers cache content locally.

CDN Traffic Growth

Demand clearly is going to keep growing. On average, households using linear TV generate much less traffic than a household that relies on Internet video.

A cord-cutting household will consume 92 GB per month in 2015, compared to 43 GB per month for a linear TV or average household. That is the difference between linear delivery using multicast (broadcast) delivery compared to on-demand unicast delivery.

Global Cord Cutting Generates Double the Traffic

That is driven in significant part by the growth of mobile video consumption. which is growing much faster than either digital TV (cable, IPTV, satellite) or online video, in terms of number of accounts.

This trend is more pronounced in regions such as North America and Western Europe, where the penetration of digital TV already is high.

Also, in emerging regions mobile video growth rates are even higher, as these regions are skipping over fixed connectivity. It therefore is not hard to envision continued strong growth of the CDN market.

Up to this point, the CDN market has been a niche within the connectivity services market. As it grows, it will become more attractive to a wider range of transport suppliers.
Global Online and Mobile Video Growing Faster Than Digital TV

Thursday, August 27, 2015

If Video Goes Mobile, Pricing Plans Will Really Have to Change

Executives at Comcast, Verizon and Dish Network are not dumb. They know there is a high likelihood of disruption of the linear video subscription business. Precisely what form any new model takes remains a matter of some speculation.


At a high level, there are three fundamentally different visions. There is the model of HBO or Netflix, where “channels” are not the foundation, programs are.


Then there is the Sling TV and other similar coming models where channels still are a building block, but the bundle is stripped down to perhaps 20 or 30 channels.


Finally, there is the completely unbundled model where single channels “go direct” to end users.


There likely is room for some forms of all three models, though it is highly probable not all three models will be of equal importance, in terms of revenue or subscribers.


The odds of a “going direct” (over the top) model are less robust, for the simple reason that the business model is the toughest. Going direct requires a huge new investment in marketing, billing and customer support that traditionally no networks possess.


One of the attractions of the traditional bundle, or even the new OTT bundles, is that the content provider can rely on the distributor for the heavy lifting in terms of marketing and support, while avoiding the issues associated with retail billing relationships.


So consider a few of the reasons Apple might eventually be a significant provider.
Apple has a customer base of nearly 90 million iPhone users just in the U.S. market.


The whole linear video business serves about 95 million households.


Apple also is among the market participants that would benefit the most from a major shift to smartphone-centric viewing. That might have seemed a foolhardy notion two decades ago. It is anything but foolish these days, at least as a potentially huge new model.


What remains unclear is what mix of “channels” and “programs” various contestants will emphasize. So far, Netflix is the leading practitioner of the “programs” model, while Sling TV is an example of the “channels” model.


Some of us would bet those are the leading future models. The “direct to consumer” approach, unbundled, might be a factor, but faces huge challenges, mostly around the business model.

Most content owners likely would agree the bundled model--either whole channels or programs--is most feasible, financially.

One unresolved issue, should the mobile model gain big traction, is how distributors will handle the capacity demands, and how they will price bandwidth. The wholesale cost for a firm such as Netflix is one thing; Internet access sold direct to end users is quite another matter.

Retail mobile Internet access costs vary, but might represent retail end user charges of between $7 per gigabyte and $15 per gigabyte. The per-gigabyte cost of a fixed network connection is more statistical, and depends on how much data a given account consumes in a single billing period. But fixed network costs in U.S. markets can be as low as a dollar a gigabyte or even less.

If video entertainment goes "mobile" to any significant degree, video bandwidth is going to be an issue, since no mobile operator likely can sell bandwidth at $1 a gigabyte or less. The obvious solution is to encourage or even require consumption only on Wi-Fi connections.

To a far greater degree than will be the case for OTT video consumed on fixed networks, mobile consumption is going to be a huge issue for ISPs.


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