| 3G Adoption and Faster Handset Replacement in Asia-Pacific Are Inevitable |
| 19th
April, 2005 ( see
below for all today's 3G news ) |
|
US : For mobile handset vendors, Asia-Pacific is the largest regional market in the world and holds the greatest potential. The region currently accounts for more than 40% of global handset sales and mobile users. Its importance will only increase as subscriber growth and device sales decelerate in the mature markets of Europe and North America. In
a region with striking income disparity, the challenge for network operators
is to drive penetration within low-income segments while encouraging
high-end migration to advanced data terminals—crucial to growing
mobile data revenue and revive flagging ARPU. Vendors must serve the
needs of operators and consumers with high volumes and a broad portfolio
of products offering customization while defending existing margins. Yankee Group updates its mobile handset forecasts on a quarterly basis. This DecisionNote outlines our forecast methodology and discusses our most recent handset sales by technology figures for Asia-Pacific. Forecast
Analysis Although mobile penetration remains below 25% across the region, most Asian markets will reach saturation at a much earlier stage compared to Japan or Western Europe due to relatively low incomes. This is particularly true of China, India and Indonesia, which collectively account for more than 70% of the region’s inhabitants. However, average mobile penetration in these three markets is only 17% and will remain below 35% during the next 5 years. Replacement handset sales will not offset the decline in new user purchases. Replacement rates vary significantly by market and are influenced by different factors. For example, Japanese consumers frequently upgrade their devices in line with trends and to gain advanced device functionalities and access to new data services. In developing and prepaid-dominant markets, replacement cycles are much longer because usage is voice- or SMS-centric, there is no data-driven impetus to upgrade and affordability remains a high barrier. The region is currently in a major upgrade cycle driven by color screens and the introduction of cameras into mainstream phones. The next major cycle—driven by moving image capabilities—is already under way in Japan and South Korea. But for the rest of Asia, 3G services must first become commercially available and data usage and 3G handset costs must be reduced further. Handset cost usually represents the greatest barrier to mobile adoption, even with 2G and 2.5G devices. New phone prices need to fall below US$50 to significantly affect penetration. Initiatives such as the GSM Association’s (GSMA’s) tender for new handsets priced at US$40 are designed to address this. Motorola has already responded with its C114 family of handsets targeting emerging markets, which will retail at around $40 initially and at $30 or less by 2006. The GSMA has already encouraged demand via a special procurement initiative from nine Asian operators. Little Demand for Advanced Data Services in Most of Asia-Pacific Japan and South Korea are driving the migration to next-generation networks (WCDMA and CDMA1x EV-DO). WCDMA services are now available in Australia and Hong Kong, while operators in Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia and Taiwan will launch commercial services in the first half of 2005. But in most of Asia, demand for advanced data services remains nascent. Low penetration levels also mean there is little operator need for the increased bandwidth and greater spectral efficiency of next-generation networks to support voice traffic. GSM-only devices remained dominant in 2004, but GPRS/EDGE and CDMA 1x unit sales will overtake them this year. Supply will drive this migration because almost all new handsets have GPRS capabilities and vendors will discontinue GSM-only devices shortly. Assuming WCDMA retail prices will fall to current 2.5G-equivalent price points, the migration to WCDMA will also be steady and will account for almost half of total unit sales in 2009. Backward compatibility with GSM and GPRS will ensure that even in countries where WCDMA is not available, 3G handsets will be popular even if their data capabilities remain unused. Between 2005 and 2009, 1.26 billion mobile phones will be sold in Asia-Pacific. China will account for the bulk of the region’s sales with 557 million units, followed by Japan with 252 million units and India with 138 million units. Consumers will buy more WCDMA devices during the next 5 years than any other technology. Combined with GSM/GPRS/EDGE devices, total sales will reach almost 900 million units during the forecast period. The CDMA technology family (cdmaOne, CDMA2000 1xRTT, EV-DO) will account for 567 million, with the remainder composed of PDC, PHS, TDMA and a small number of analog devices. |
| 3G
FORUM - a place to rant and rave ! |
| Today's
3G News |
| 3 Italy Finalizes 3G Managed Services Contract |
| Ericsson and 3 Italy have finalized the due diligence and execution of the managed services contract announced on January 20, 2005. |
| VimpelCom to Broadcast Live to 10m Mobile Subscribers |
| Celltick’s, the market leader in idle-screen applications and interactive mobile broadcast, turns Russian mobile operator VimpelCom into a national media broadcaster overnight. |
| Telabria merges Wi-Fi with 3G |
| Telabria, the award winning wireless network developer, announced the latest addition to its mSystem family of indoor and outdoor wireless mesh access points and routers. |
| 3G Adoption and Faster Handset Replacement in Asia-Pacific Are Inevitable |
| For mobile handset vendors, Asia-Pacific is the largest regional market in the world and holds the greatest potential. The region currently accounts for more than 40% of global handset sales and mobile users. |
| Connex launches 3G |
| Connex, Romania's leading mobile network and first video mobile network, announces the April 25th, 2005 launch of 3G services in Romania. |
| Orange France Expands EDGE Wireless Services |
| Orange France has launched a new high-speed mobile service which covers 85 percent of French inhabitants. |
| Wildwave Launches Havoc TV on Vodafone 3G |
| Wildwave today launched the Havoc TV Mobile Music Video channel on Vodafone Live! powered by 3G, The channel is based on Havoc TV Video on demand, which which is currently carried to millions of US households via top cable carriers . |
| 3 UK to launch Football365 m-site |
| ukbetting plc, the online gaming and sports content provider, announced today the launch of its first branded, stand alone, channel on the UK's largest 3G mobile network. |
| 3G World Congress and Exhibition 2005 in Hong Kong |
| This year marks the 10th anniversary of the leading event in Asia for global mobile and wireless industry covering all 3G and emerging wireless technologies. New elements including the "Networking Area" and the "WiMAX Village" will be added to this year's event. |
| Tatara Systems Demonstrates Fixed Mobile Convergence |
| One of the first fixed mobile convergence solutions being offered by Tatara is SMS over IP, which allows communications service providers to seamlessly handoff SMS traffic from their legacy circuit network to an IP network (e.g. over WLAN). |
| Deal Reinforces Nokia's Leading Position in 3GPP Core Networks |
| Nokia has signed an agreement with leading Indonesian operator Telkomsel to expand its packet core network in Indonesia. |
| Rogers First In Canada To Provide Live TV On Cell Phones |
| Rogers Mobile Television service is powered by MobiTV, the world's first network and platform providing live television on wireless phones. |
| 3G Mobile Video Content for Telecom New Zealand |
| Gamer.tv has signed an agreement with Telecom New Zealand to supply video game reviews, previews and features for access by Telecom's T3G customers. |
| Woosh Order with IPWireless Triples its 3G UMTS TDD Network |
| Woosh Wireless and IPWireless announced today that the New Zealand broadband service provider has placed an order for an additional 180 UMTS TDD base stations to expand its New Zealand network. |
| SK Telecom Releases "GXG", Mobile Phone 3D Games |
| SK Telecom has launched a variety of great 3D games that let users enjoy a sense of incredible speed and powerful graphics by upgrading the existing mobile games offered via mobile phone. |
| 3G HSDPA Tipped as a Low-Cost Path to Fast Mobile Broadband |
| Mobile communications infrastructure vendors and carriers, impatiently waiting to offer their customers mobile broadband services, would do well to consider HSDPA (High-Speed Downlink Packet Access) as an economical alternative. |
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