Thursday, May 19, 2022

Rule of Three Seems to Hold, Whether Facilities-Based or Wholesale is the Access Mechanism

Communications policy makers long have believed that where facilities-based competition is not possible, a robust wholesale framework is the best alternative. And at least where North America or Europe are concerned, that belief seems justified. 


Whether reliance on wholesale or facilities competition is authorized, market share structures tend to be fairly similar: leadership by three firms, corresponding to the rule of three


“A stable competitive market never has more than three significant competitors, the largest of which has no more than four times the market share of the smallest,” BCG founder Bruce Henderson said in 1976.  


Codified as the rule of three, the observations explains the stable competitive market structure that develops over time, in many industries


That 4:2:1 pattern suggests that the market leader has twice the share of provider number two; which in turn has double the share of provider number three.   


In the fixed networks, though we might argue the market share pattern is not yet stable, that suggests a mobile or fixed network market should be led by three firms. 

source: ACCC


In the French fixed network internet access business, which is largely based on use of wholesale access, share structure is not too dissimilar to that seen in Australia, which uses a wholesale approach. 


source: Point Topic


In the United Kingdom, which has a wholesale regime for fixed network internet access providers, but also has facilities competition from O2 Virgin, market share structure also is not dissimilar from markets where competition is largely wholesale based. 

source: Statista 


In the U.S,. fixed networks market, which relies on facilities-based competition, we also see the “market leadership by three firms” pattern. The qualification is that no fixed network  firm is actually allowed to cover the entire market, which adds a bit more fragmentation, in terms of firms with four percent to five percent market share. 

Source: Leichtman Research Group data, IP Carrier analysis

The Downsides of Cryptocurrency

As with money itself, it often is hard to determine whether cryptocurrency is inherently good or bad; it depends on how it is used. 


Cryptocurrency often is said to offer the values of lower transaction costs; greater security; lower fraud exposure and possibly even categories of money that cannot be used for certain purposes, or by certain persons.


That might be either a tool for political suppression or liberty; safety or danger. Money that cannot be used in certain ways which might protect children. It could prevent some forms of money laundering and crime. 


It could just as easily be used by governments or groups to suppress political freedom and civil rights, as if a government-sanctioned or controlled crypto could be programmed to prevent certain types of spending by some individuals or groups. 


If we already see efforts to destroy the businesses or careers of people whose views are considered noxious (even if simply views one does not support) you can see where the temptation to do so using crypto features does exist. 


But crypto also raises other issues, including among them the most basic question of “what is money?” Can it function as a medium of exchange that--like all money--reduces transaction costs? There is the related issue of whether crypto also can function as a store of value like gold.  


Some believe cryptocurrencies could enhance financial system resiliency as well, in part by separating the lending function from other financial services including payments.  


And since micropayments are viewed as a feature of Web 3.0, there is a relationship between cryptocurrency and different Web monetization methods, including the ability to pay content creators. 


Eventually, thoughtful protections will be necessary to prevent the darker side of crypto from emerging in ways that attack civil liberties and human freedom.


Wednesday, May 18, 2022

Less than 25% of U.S. Commercial Buildings Have Fiber Connections

Roughly 1.3 million--24.7 percent of the five million commercial buildings in the United States are lit with optical fiber, according to Vertical Systems Group. That is an improvement from the 11 percent of fiber-connected buildings in 2004, for example.  


That suggests the large number of smaller locations where demand is not believed to support immediate fiber-to-location deployments. 


As you would expect, the larger buildings have been wired. Buildings with 20 or more employees had fiber access at nearly 75 percent.


Buildings with fewer than 20 employees had a fiber access rate of about 16 percent. 


Cable operators saw an opportunity there and have made a business out of supplying higher bandwidth to such locations using hybrid fiber coax access. Small business connections, in particular, were an early focus for cable operators, as some have estimated that 80 percent of small businesses did not require gigabit connections.

BT Business Push Reflects Market Structure

BT's new push to support business customers makes sense for a couple of reasons, but primarily because much of the revenue earned by a telco or mobile operator comes from business customers. 


source" Grand View Research 


Also, much of the new revenue from 5G is expected to come from business use cases. 


The other obvious angle is that there is only so much revenue connectivity providers can coax out of consumers, who tend to spend less than three percent of their income on all communication services and devices. 


Even when business customer spending is not materially higher, percentage-wise, the gross revenue and profit margins tend to be much higher than for consumer services. 

source 


And that matters, as telco return on invested capital has been falling since 2010. Industry supporters cite government regulation as a possible way of boosting returns. The call for payments by a handful of giant app providers to fund telco infrastructure is an example of that. 


source: McKinsey

Monday, May 16, 2022

Major Channel Conflicf in Internet Ecosystem

Channel conflict always exists, to some extent, in any value chain, since one participant’s revenue model is another participant’s cost of doing business.

That has been an issue in the internet ecosystem for some time, as app creation and ownership has been separated from network facilities ownership. In other words, the very organization of the internet and computing separates functions into layers that operate independently of each other.




source: GSMA

Participants in the ecosystem act in a “permissionless” manner. And that always has irked connectivity providers, as any person with access rights or any lawful app can use the network without a formal business relationship with the underlying network.

So the connectivity industry now is making a push to alter revenue models. Consider a couple of analogies. What if refrigerator manufacturers and air conditioning suppliers had to pay electrical utilities additional fees because they drive electrical use on the grid?

Connectivity providers argue about revenue or valuation shares to make the argument that they are due more value from the ecosystem. But that is like arguing all appliances and apps using electricity collectively represent the vast proportion of value in the “anything using electricity” ecosystem.

That is the case in virtually every ecosystem: the things humans do that use electricity are vastly more “valuable” in economic terms than the value of electricity that gets sold. In other words, things people buy and businesses sell is the bulk of value in any area.



source: GSMA

It is not a stretch to argue that increasing costs for some participants to shift revenue to some other part of the ecosystem is simply part of the normal desire of any participant to “make more money.”

In a sense, that is “calling party pays” in the communications business. That also is the principle behind “access fees” paid by one carrier to another when customers place calls between networks. If one network terminates a call placed by a customer on another network, the receiving network is paid for the use of its network to do so.

The model actually works in the reverse in the water supply business in the United States. The heaviest users--farmers--pay far less for water than do the lighter household users. You can think of all sorts of public policy reasons why that should be the case, but the point is that subsidies and prices in an ecosystem can vary, and will be the source of channel conflict within an ecosystem.

In the end, the retail buyer pays for all the other profits of all the other participants in any ecosystem. A sustainable infrastructure matters as much as sustainability for all the other essential parts of any ecosystem.

But make no mistake: what connectivity providers propose is similar to charging third party appliance, app, content or other suppliers in the ecosystem to use a network that--like any other utility--ultimately makes its money charging its own customers for usage.

There is nothing magical about business models. Markets can be created and sustained with revenue created both by buyers and sellers; users and customers; suppliers and consumers. To the extent that government can change the rules shaping any industry’s business model, there is nothing “unlawful” about some entities proposing that the government change rules about how internet access services are provided.

The proposal by connectivity providers that both customers (end users of connectivity services) and partners supplying appliances, apps, services and content also pay for access is, however, a change of business model for any utility-type business (natural gas, drinking water, sanitation; waste management; electricity and telecommunications).

Some might point to airports as an example of such “both sides pay” models. Airlines pay landing fees to airports. Passengers pay airlines for travel. But airlines also recoup the cost of landing fees from passengers. So, ultimately, passengers pay for the landing fees of the airlines.

Connectivity providers propose something along those same lines. It is not unusual nor unlawful for them to try. It would not be unlawful if implemented. But customers (or end users) would still wind up paying, as all the other participants who are assessed new costs would find ways to recover those costs from their own customers.

Those “customers” would be advertisers in some cases, who would then recoup their own higher costs by passing them on to retail buyers in some fashion. In principle, the costs could be partly passed onto their own suppliers or investors.

Sustainable infrastructure is a good thing. Sustainability for the rest of the ecosystem is a good thing as well. But this a prime example of channel conflict.

Thursday, May 12, 2022

The Internet Already is "Balkanized"

International communications have always been borderless in a controlled way. Both governments and service providers have guidelines about how and when communications can cross borders. 


Oddly enough, there are more barriers in the internet era, in large part because governments always have controlled the movement of content across borders.


So  regulation might be a bit different in the internet era, but it has not gone away, by any means. In fact, more barriers exist, compared to the days when only voice crossed borders. 


Governments routinely block some content, a process that has been obvious for some time.


source: Freedom House 


The internet is not borderless.


How Will We Know FTTH and 5G Have Succeeded?

How will we know either fiber to the home or 5G has been successful? As with anything else, what one hoped to achieve matters. As always, there are many possible answers: minimum case and best case.


For policymakers, either FTTH or 5G policy succeeds once the networks are built. Even for service providers, FTTH and 5G succeed if they enable fixed and mobile network operators to remain in business: they are competitive with other service providers, for example.


Policymakers can claim victory if the networks are built. Nothing else really has to happen.


Service providers win if they are not driven out of business; if they maintain or slightly increase revenues; if they maintain profitability.


Infrastructure providers win as they are able to fuel sales for one more generation of networks. App providers win as the new networks help create more room for feature and performance advantages.


Consumers win if their experience includes lower latency and high speeds, for about the same price as the older platforms supplied.


There are likely to be some new use cases and revenues, to be sure. But none of those use cases will match the importance of the "minimum" outcomes outlined above.


One must ask what the “real value” is from several vantage points. Most fundamentally, mobile operators need more capacity to keep up with growing customer data consumption, only some of which can be satisfied by the other traditional mechanisms of creating smaller cells, using better radios, offloading traffic and shaping demand. 


From a mobile operator’s perspective, 5G arguably succeeds if it simply allows operators to keep pace with end user data demand, while operating with higher cost-per-bit efficiency.


In other words, 5G succeeds if it allows mobile operators to supply more data at about the same retail price. Some might complain about the need to keep reinvesting, but that is foundational to the business. 


About every decade, we have found, a new block of spectrum is required and a new network has to be built. 


In part, that is because of saturation of the available capacity on the existing networks and in part because technology advances typically provide an order of magnitude improvement in capacity and latency performance with every next-generation network. 


All that helps mobile operators maintain or improve their core businesses in terms of revenue, profit margins, equity prices and market share. Fundamentally, 5G is about “keeping your business.” 


Of course, there are other ways to look at outcomes. How do mobile operators and others in the untethered ecosystem convince regulators to release additional spectrum? Economic growth; protection of supply chains; support for domestic industries; consumer and business benefits; educational and social benefits and jobs are outcomes governments want, so mobile operators almost have to argue that 5G supports such outcomes. 


Perhaps looking at 4G will help with the assessment. Questions about payback were relatively frequently expressed early in the global rollout of 4G mobile networks, even as proponents emphasized possible new applications. 


source: TechTrained 


Capacity and lower cost per bit always seem to be among the key values of any next-generation mobile network, even if such platforms are pitched as “new application” drivers. The reasons are fairly pedestrian. 


To convince regulators to allocate significant new spectrum, mobile advocates must emphasize all the potential benefits for economic growth, national security, innovation leadership and so forth. 


It simply does not sell well to argue “you need to give us more spectrum so our business models remain intact” or “so we can lower our cost per bit.” 


Nor should we discount the eventual emergence of new apps and use cases made possible because of lower latency and faster speeds. 


But we do not need 5G to do anything more than sustain the existing mobile business model to claim success. All that other hype about new apps is simply the best argument mobile operators have for convincing regulators to release more spectrum. 


Infrastructure suppliers, likewise, have every incentive to convince mobile service providers that they are in danger of falling behind, or missing out on revenue growth, if they do not upgrade. 


In such circumstances, we can simply assume that 5G succeeds if mobile operators still have a positive business case. Everything else is nice, but not essential in the short term.


AI Will Improve Productivity, But That is Not the Biggest Possible Change

Many would note that the internet impact on content media has been profound, boosting social and online media at the expense of linear form...