US Wireless Market Q2 2008 Update Aug 2008 Chetan Sharma Consulting
<
http://www.slideshare.net/chetansharma/us-wireless-market-q2-2008-update-aug-2008-chetan-sharma-consulting?src=embed
>


http://www.chetansharma.com/usmarketupdateq208.htm

The US wireless data market grew 40% in Q208 compared to Q207 to reach
$8.2B in data revenues. The total for 2008 stands at $15.7B for the
first six months, 38% higher than the total for the same time period in
2007. The news of Alltel acquisition, iPhone 3G, and the flat rate
pricing wars dominated the news. Though the infatuation for iPhone was a
few degrees lower, Apple managed to keep the device front and center of
the news cycles. US again exceeded Japan in mobile data service revenues
for the quarter and the market is on track to reach $34B in data
revenues for 2008.

   * The US Wireless data service revenues grew 8.6% Q/Q to $8.2B in
     Q208. Compared to Q107, the data service revenues grew 40%.
   * Overall ARPU increased by $0.46. Average voice ARPU declined by
     $0.05 while average data ARPU grew by $0.50 or 5%.
   * Verizon lead in data ARPU with $12.58 (or 24.41% of the revenues)
     closely followed by Sprint at $12 (or 21.4354%), AT&T at $11.59
     (or 22.91%) and T-Mobile at $8.60 (or 17%).
   * The strongest growth in Q208 came from Verizon with 13% increase
     in data revenues from Q108. Verizon generated an industry record
     $2.6B in data revenues closely followed by AT&T at $2.5B. Both
     AT&T and Verizon are on target to exceed $10B in data revenues for
     the year for the first time by any operator worldwide besides NTT
     DoCoMo (the two US carriers are already close to 50% of the
     target). AT&T and Verizon now account for 62% of the market data
     services revenues. Sprint reversed its decline in data revenues
     during last quarter to increase its data revenues by 3% in Q208.
     T-Mobile registered a 5% uptick.
   * The average industry % contribution of data to service revenues
     exceeded 21% and now stands at 21.41%. A year ago, the %
     contribution stood at approximately 17%.
   * The number of data subscribers has been on the rise with Verizon
     leading the way. At the end of Q208, Verizon had that 49.6M (or
     72%) data subscribers. Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile subscribers
     joined to send over 169 Billion text messages in Q208 translating
     into almost a message every 2 hours or so. This compared to users
     in Philippines where average routinely surpasses a message every
     hour.
   * In terms of net-adds, Verizon continued to lead with 1.5M net-adds
     again edging AT&T by 200K subscribers for the quarter.
   * For the first time, T-Mobile USA entered the top 10 rankings of
     global mobile operators by data revenues replacing SK Telecom
     which suffered decline for the second straight quarter. In fact,
     SKT got pushed to the 12th spot by Orange France. The top three US
     carriers again maintained their respective rankings amongst the
     top 10 global carriers in terms of data revenues. For the quarter,
     Verizon, AT&T, and Sprint Nextel stood at #4, 5, and 6
     respectively with Verizon and AT&T closing in on China Mobile
     (2nd) and KDDI (3rd). AT&T and Verizon are in the select group of
     five global operators who are now generating $2B or more in data
     revenues/quarter (the other three are NTT DoCoMo, China Mobile,
     and KDDI).
   * Non-messaging continues to grab 50-60% of the data revenues for
     the US carriers.
   * The flat-rate pricing movement that was started by Willcom in
     Japan which moved to Europe started to enter the US market with
     industry wide flat-rate pricing plans that included data. Sprint
     has been the most aggressive with its "Simply Everything" plans
     that include data services. 30% of its $100 plan is assigned to
     data revenues (for accounting purposes).
   * Q208 saw the blockbuster acquisition of Alltel by Verizon which is
     likely to close by end of the year. The $28B acquisition will
     catapult Verizon ahead of AT&T in total number of subscribers by a
     big margin (10M or so) and make it a leader in almost all major
     categories.
   * There continues to be tremendous activity in the area of Mobile
     Advertising. AdInfuse, Admob, Amobee, Millennial Media, Nokia,
     Rhythm New Media, Yahoo, and others ran compelling campaigns.
     There was also meaningful activity on the carrier front with
     industry wide initiatives.

   * Venture money experienced a decline into the mobile sector. During
     the first half of the year, private wireless companies announced
     $1.8B in 173 financings, compared to $2.7B in 209 financings for
     the same time period last year. (Source: Rutberg)
   * Nokia eclipsed 100M unit sale in Q208 for the fifth straight
     quarter. It sold over 122M handsets in Q208 (out of the total
     297M), almost as many as the next four combined. Nokia's global
     market share edged past 41%. Samsung at 15%, Motorola with 9.5%,
     LG with 9.3% and Sony Ericsson with 8% rounded out the top five.
     For the year, the industry looks to again eclipse the 1 billion
     handset mark for 2008
   * 3G penetration in the US went past 30% in Q208, with Verizon
     leading the pack with over 60% 3G subscriber penetration compared
     to 25% 3G subscriber penetration at AT&T. T-Mobile is slowly
     expanding its 3G coverage. 3G subs have over $23 in data ARPU.
     These trends are expected and the diffusion of mobile broadband
     will continue to create new opportunities and revenues for the
     ecosystem.
   * Apple announced a 3G iPhone in June and launched an aggressive
     expansion plan to reach 70+ countries. The broadband and appstore
     capabilities are quite attractive to consumers and it shows. VPN
     and direct access to Exchange will get many more users into the
     mix and IT folks less apprehensive. The clearcut business model of
     30/70 split is also attractive. Apple is likely to announce in
     Sept (may wait for its quarterly results in Oct) that it has
     reached the 10M goal for iPhone.
   * Feeling the threat from Apple and Google, Nokia bought the
     remaining portion of Symbian and announced the plan to open-source
     the OS, making things interesting in the wireless ecosystem. It
     puts Microsoft on the defensive and will be forced to reduce its
     licensing fee per device closer to zero. While Apple basked in the
     glow of iPhone 2.0, Google spent time swatting rumors of Android
     delay. Giving the changing dynamics in the industry, Google might
     be forced to play its gPhone hand earlier than it had anticipated.
   * After raising $14.5B from friends and family, Clearwire's net-adds
     dropped in Q208. It needs to get its content and handset strategy
     in place in short-order.
   * In a sign of convergence battles to come, T-Mobile's @Home and
     Sprint's Femto cell initiatives started to take hold. Cable
     operators are also aggressively seeking triple-play by providing
     the wireless component of the service.

*Global update*

   * China and India added approximately 52M subscriptions combined in
     Q208 with China marginally edging out India. For the year, both
     countries have added almost identical number of subscriptions
     (53M). By comparison, US added 7.5M for the same time period.
   * NTT DoCoMo continues to dominate the wireless data revenues
     rankings with almost $3.4B in data services revenue in Q208.
     Almost 40% of its revenue now comes from data services. DoCoMo
     also crossed 84% in 3G penetration in Q208 and is expected to
     cross 90% by early 2009.
   * Most of the major carriers around the world have double digit
     percentage contribution to their overall ARPU from data services.
     Operators like KDDI, DoCoMo, and O2 UK are consistently topping 30%.

/ More details in our worldwide wireless data market update in our
Global Wireless Data Market Update Sept 2008./

Your feedback is always welcome.

Thanks.

Chetan Sharma

http://www.chetansharma.com/blog/2008/08/10/us-wireless-data-market-update-q2-2008/


On Wed, Sep 10, 2008 at 9:10 PM, luckyandroid <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:

>
> I would find such predictions extremely helpful, even if it is
> impossible to be accurate.
> When writing a business plan, financial projections are needed, even
> if they are guesses.
> And I know Google and the OHA could make better guesses than me.
> -mac
>
> On Sep 10, 3:57 am, Eric <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > In my opinion, if there is such Market research data, it will NOT be
> > reliable. E.g. did apple knew how successful Ipod would get before
> > they release it? I doubt so.
> > Or can Intel predict whether their Atom processor market size vs ARM's
> > in the next few years? No they can't. The market will determine it
> > with time.
> >
> > If Google or the Alliance produce such projection and release to the
> > public, they are really looking for trouble.........if it turns out to
> > be incorrect. Imagine the amount of backlash they would get......just
> > like the delay in the SDK release. Don't think Google would take such
> > a risk....
> >
> > In my opinion, also agrees with some of the others out there, Android
> > should have the same if not larger market potential than the Iphone.
> >
> > Possible to disclose which company you are from? Your company plan to
> > build Android HW in-house? What sort of hardware u want to build?
> > We could collaborate somehow if your company is interested. Contact
> > me :)
> >
> > BTW, I have not seen any publications and would be interested to see
> > one because we are building some Android hardware ;)
> >
> > Cheers
> > Eric
> > Portable Electronics Ltdwww.hdmp4.com
> >
> > On Sep 10, 9:58 am, Prady <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > > Mark
> > > Thanks for reminding.
> > > The marketing/publicity generated so far represents "it is Google's
> > > Android".
> > > OHA as a org is sleeping I guess. They do not reply at the e-mail
> > > address they have [EMAIL PROTECTED] at their alliance FAQ page even after
> > > reminder. While we get replies from every tech giants.
> > > That means getting market projections will not be easy except Google
> > > sponsors some study.
> >
> > > Even I had a dream about an Internet enabled OS for mobile phones and
> > > all small devices after starting development in J2ME which our company
> > > stopped because of so many versions for so many phones. This is one
> > > main reason why I am a well-wisher of Android.
> >
> > > Let us hope for better with Google, HTC .....:)
> >
> > > Thanks
> > > Prady
> >
> > > On Sep 10, 2:30 am, "Mark Murphy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > > > > I hope, Google creates some such marketing projections available (I
> > > > > hope, Google listening).
> >
> > > > Android is an initiative of the Open Handset Alliance
> > > > (http://www.openhandsetalliance.com/). Google is an important member
> of
> > > > that alliance, but it is just one member.
> >
> > > > > To be successful, one organization needs a "marketing
> organization",
> > > > > not just "developers organization".
> >
> > > > Why do you believe that creating "marketing projections" or the
> "marketing
> > > > organization" is a job of Google's instead of the Alliance's?
> >
> > > > > I know you are marketing it to developers. There should be somebody
> to
> > > > > market it to all stakeholders such as end-customers, handset
> > > > > manufacturers, mobile service providers etc etc. I do not see that
> > > > > much visibility though. What do you think?
> >
> > > > The Open Handset Alliance has handset manufacturers, mobile service
> > > > providers, etc.
> >
> > > > --
> > > > Mark Murphy (a Commons Guy)http://commonsware.com
> > > > _The Busy Coder's Guide to Android Development_ Version 1.2
> Published!
>
> >
>


-- 
==
take care,
Muthu Ramadoss.

http://mobeegal.in - mobile search redefined. +91 98403 48914

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Android Discuss" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/android-discuss?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to