Monday, March 20, 2017

Is FTTH Era Over, Next to Lead by Wireless?

AT&T and Verizon are pushing ahead with trials of pre-5G networks operating in fixed wireless mode. Though that might not make as much financial sense in many other markets, there is a very good reason why AT&T and Verizon feel fixed wireless is so important, as an early deployment strategy.


The reason is that they have lost the market share battle with cable companies for consumer internet access, and even full fiber-to-home network deployment would likely fail to change that. Even where Verizon runs ubiquitous FTTH networks (FiOS), it gets only about 40 percent market share.


If one assumes internet access is the core consumer service delivered over a fixed network, that is bad news, as it suggests even ubiquitous FTTH can change telco market share in consumer internet access.


That is a hugely important development. Even if FTTH can be deployed at lower costs, the business model might no longer work well enough to support full deployment. The hope always has been that FTTH costs would drop low enough that fiber was a complete substitute for copper access media.


Instead, markets now have changed enough that even cost equivalency with copper is not enough. The new issue is the business model for ubiquitous fixed networks, which increasingly drive less revenue and profit for U.S. telcos.


Hence the interest in platforms that are even more capital efficient, can be built faster and at lower cost, while better leveraging core assets. Recent trends suggest telcos might be forced to move in a new direction, as they now are losing the internet access business to cable, and even full FTTH might only halt losses to the point where telcos get about 40 percent share.

In other words, FTTH might no longer provide any hope of retaking leadership in the consumer internet access business.

Telcos Losing Internet Access Accounts at a Faster Rate to Cable

There is a reason much of the attention in the consumer internet access business now is focused on varieties of wireless access (balloons, low earth orbiting satellites, fixed wireless, bonding of licensed and unlicensed spectrum, 5G and millimeter wave).

Though the economics of fiber to the home have gotten better over the last few decades, the business model also has been under pressure from substitute products, the impact of competition on financial returns and the maturation of all legacy revenue models.

In the U.S. market, rival platforms already have had a huge effect, with cable companies using hybrid fiber coax platforms capturing all the net growth in the consumer segment of the internet access market.

The top cable companies netted 122 percent of the broadband additions in 2016, increasing gains from the 106 percent they gained  in 2015 and the 89 percent they got in 2014. To be sure, the leading telcos (AT&T, Verizon, CenturyLink) now have stepped up fiber-to-home deployments. But Verizon’s experience also suggests that that ubiquitous fiber deployment results in market share of about 40 percent to 45 percent.

The top telcos, in contrast,  lost 600,000 accounts in 2016, compared to a loss of about 185,000 subscribers in 2015. As the consumer internet access market is mostly a zero-sum gain, cable gains are at the expense of telcos.

In other words, under perhaps the best of circumstances (dense urban markets, lots of capital, marketing muscle), a big telco still loses leadership of the internet access market to cable competitors. To be sure, all-copper digital subscriber line services are where telcos mostly lose the battle to cable.

That scenario might remind you very much of Sprint, back in the days when it was bleeding former Nextel accounts, even as legacy Sprint accounts grew slightly, or lost just a bit of share. In other words, some segments of the customer base are more susceptible to predation.

Telcos face great difficulties in rural areas and less-dense suburban areas, where FTTH costs arguably would not produce a clear financially-positive result. Cable company networks always were built for low-cost access, always were broadband and now are easier to upgrade incrementally than telco networks.

All of that means there is a market opportunity, for all competitors to cable companies, in new platforms (mobile, Wi-Fi, LEO satellites, balloons, unmanned aerial vehicles, fixed wireless, 5G) now are getting serious attention to FTTH.

ISPs
Subscribers  4Q 2016
Net Adds
Cable Companies


Comcast
24,701,000
1,372,000
Charter
22,593,000
1,604,000
Altice*
3,907,000
122,000
Mediacom
1,156,000
71,000
WOW (WideOpenWest)**
718,900
20,600
Cable ONE
513,908
12,667
Other Major Private Company^
4,790,000
90,000
Total Top Cable
58,379,808
3,292,267



Phone Companies


AT&T
15,605,000
(173,000)
Verizon
7,038,000
(47,000)
CenturyLink
5,945,000
(103,000)
Frontier^^
4,271,000
(243,000)
Windstream
1,051,100
(44,000)
FairPoint
306,624
(4,506)
Cincinnati Bell
303,200
15,800
Total Top Telco
35,519,924
(598,706)



Total Top Broadband
92,899,732
2,693,561


Sunday, March 19, 2017

5G Spectrum Will Feature Coverage, Capacity, Indoor Pattern

Up until the 4G era, mobile and Wi-Fi spectrum have been seen as having rather clear roles: lower frequency for coverage; mid-band for capacity and Wi-Fi for indoor distribution. In the 5G era, that tripartite pattern will be even more pronounced, with the key changes coming in the millimeter wave bands, which are seen as best suited for capacity and indoor coverage.
source: Ofcom

Saturday, March 18, 2017

If ROIC is What Matters, So Does Market Share

Market share plays a large role in financial results. Looking at market share and return on invested capital (ROIC) for the three largest players in Thailand, China, and Indonesia since 2015, you can see that financial return and market share tend to be directly related.

My rule of thumb is that the leader has twice the share of number two, which in turn has twice the share of provider number three. In Thailand, China and Indonesia, the general pattern holds, In Thailand the pattern holds well. The leader has 53 percent share, number two has 31 percent and number three has 17 percent share.

The theoretical model I use would call for shares of 50/25/13, or any other ratio that maintains the same sort of relationships between market share among the top-three providers.

The Chinese market diverges: the leader has 69 percent share; number two 17 percent and number three 14 percent.

In Indonesia, the market leader has 65 percent share; number two has 18 percent and number three has 17 percent.

My approach also suggests that any market not having the 50/25/13 structure is unstable, with the big changes to be expected in share shifts from the number-one provider to number two. The third provider in all three of these markets actually is doing as well as a stable structure would suggest.

Those relationships also include varying rates of return on deployed capital, with one possible and important exception. Where the leading provider generally earns the highest ROIC, and in some cases can wring extraordinary profits out of market leadership, the relationship between market share and ROIC is less predictable for providers two and three, in any of these markets.

Still, the general pattern is important. Market share matters because it is related, more or less in a linear fashion, with profit and return on invested capital, although perhaps in a less certain way than market share structures tend to take, in stable markets.

Source: Reperio Capital

Source: Reperio Capital

ROIC issues for access services are one reason why the strategy of “moving up the stack” or “up the value chain” continues to be relevant and necessary for at least the larger telcos, cable companies and similar access providers. Mergers to gain scale will help, in many cases, but the fundamental problem--lack of organic growth for network services--will be a key constraint.

Market consolidation, in many cases, also will help, as market share and financial return tend to be correlated. So increasing share will tend to boost financial performance. In all three countries studies by Reperio Capital, market share and ROIC were related. In the clearest example, the number three provider in all three countries had single digit ROIC. Provider number one had high or even extraordinarily high ROIC.

ROIC Will be Key Concern in 5G Era

Some observers point out that the higher costs of 5G networks--driven by small cell architectures and the need for more backhaul and more radio sites--is going to mean 5G networks cost more than 4G networks. Logic suggests the merit of that view. Macrocell networks (4G and earlier generations) require fewer towers, sites, radios, frequency coordination and backhaul than microcell networks. 

And that means a current problem--return on invested capital--is going to become even more important in the 5G era. 

Return on invested capital, not earnings (EBITDA) or cash flow, now is the way major telcos have to measure business results, argue analysts at PwC. The fundamental reason is that “growth is gone and it’s not coming back,” say PwC analysts.  “Downward trends in return on invested capital (ROIC) are the result of a number of factors, from regulated price reductions to cannibalization of legacy revenues by OTTs, along with high capital intensity required to support demand for data,” say researchers at EY.

So if revenue growth is muted, what matters is how well access providers monetize invested capital. That is not going to be easy.



Philippines telco Globe Telecom had a return on capital of about 7.7 percent in the third quarter of 2016. Airtel in India points out that, in 2016, some Indian telcos might have had a one-percent return on capital.

That 7.7 percent rate is about in line with global telecom firm financial returns from the 1990s until perhaps 2006. But there can be wide variation. In the U.S. market, in 2013, Verizon has ROIC of more than 13 percent, while CenturyLink has ROIC of minus 7.4 percent.





ROIC issues for access services are one reason why the strategy of “moving up the stack” or “up the value chain” continues to be relevant and necessary for at least the larger telcos, cable companies and similar access providers. Mergers to gain scale will help, in many cases, but the fundamental problem--lack of organic growth for network services--will be a key constraint.

Market consolidation, in many cases, also will help, as market share and financial return tend to be correlated.

Friday, March 17, 2017

TIA 5G Survey Suggests Potential Business Model Trouble

A new study issued by the TIA finds that 33 percent of respondents expect their companies will be offering commercial 5G by the end of 2020. However, there is a lack of consensus regarding the competitive advantage that might be gleaned from being first to market.

Some 48 percent of respondents said “being first to market” was unimportant or “only somewhat important” for their company’s competitive position. About 35.5 percent of respondents believe it is very important to lead deployment, though. Another 6.4 percent extremely important.

In general, operators in technologically advanced and mature markets place greater emphasis on being the first to launch 5G, while those that operate in less technologically advanced or less mature markets do not, the study, conducted by Tolaga Research, and sponsored by InterDigital, found.


source: TIA

Almost a third of respondents plan to launch pre-standard 5G products, one way of determining 5G deployment “high perceived value.”  Australia, China, Japan, Korea, and the United States are in that group.

That is probably a reflection either of market maturity (5G promises revenue upside--and significant upside) as well as expectations of higher initial demand for internet of things products and services that will be supported by 5G.

But the survey also suggests the business models for 5G are fluid and even unknown, to a large extent.

About 56 percent of respondents believed mobile broadband services would be “significantly transformed.”

Only 30 percent of respondents believed that machine-type communications will be significantly transformed by 5G, and 50 percent expected that ultra-reliable and ultra-low latency services will be not be significantly transformed by 5G.  

That will be a problem, if the views prove correct. Only 56 percent of respondents believe 5G will fail to significantly transform mobile broadband. If so, 5G will be an expensive way to possibly transform 4G mobile access.

Worse, should respondent views prove correct, is that 70 percent seem to believe M2M will not be a key benefit of 5G, while only half think low-latency new services will be transformed.

Ignoring for the moment the impact of that specific terminology (“transformed” rather than “enabled,” for example), most executives are signaling trouble for the business model.

If 5G promises big new revenues in IoT and M2M, and operator executives seem not to believe that will happen, there could be serious business model issues, of the “still a dumb pipe” variety. There is only so much incremental financial value to be wrung from 5G access speeds. Most of the revenue upside is going to come (observers currently believe) from IoT apps and services.

If 5G mostly is a “faster dumb pipe,” then the capital investment is likely to produce paltry returns.

AI Can Help with This Type of Problem

A report by the Mobile Marketing Association and RadiumOne finds 66 percent of marketers are not “fully confident” they know the “most critical” digital signals that they can correlate with behavior.

This sort of problem--lots of data and algorithms that are not able to interpret such data--seems the sort of problem artificial intelligence is ideally suited to solve.

Fully 58 percent were not fully confident their re-engagement efforts were effective against customer churn, while half called into question their ability to acquire new customers and re-engage those they'd lost.

The signals marketers considered the most important for mobile branding was that garnered from content sharing from apps (29 percent), mobile site visits (28 percent), and app installs (27 percent). For mobile direct response, its purchase data (38 percent), geolocation and bookmarked content (both 35 percent).

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