News, views and commentary from the telecoms sector across emerging markets and developing countries worldwide
Showing posts with label GSM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GSM. Show all posts

Monday, 22 June 2009

CDMA-alive-and-well Watch: good news from India?

For the last month or so, media, analysts and bloggers have offered comment about the news that India has overtaken China to become the world's largest CDMA market. This was announced last month by the CDMA Development Group (CDG), the trade association whose role is to foster the worldwide development, implementation and use of CDMA2000 technologies.

According to the CDG, "there are now more than 100 million CDMA subscribers in India". This figure, however, is some distance from the number provided by the Informa Telecoms & Media World Cellular Information Service, according to which there were 77.1 million Indian CDMA subs by the end of March. According to WCIS figure, this rose from 72.6 million as of December 2008 and 66.6 million as of September 2008 - fairly consistent growth of about 5 million subs per quarter. If the WCIS figure are accurate, it's hard to imagine a sudden leap to 100 million subs by late May.

As well as impressive-sounding subcription numbers, the CDG press release also featured warmly supportive quotes from India's two leading CDMA operators:

"CDMA is a technology that allows a rich telecom experience, especially on the data side, and we are confident that in the years to come that experience will only get better, especially as 3G arrives and we are able to unleash the full potential of applications and services," said Mr. Anil Sardana, Managing Director of Tata Teleservices.

"We remain committed to further grow and serve our ever-increasing CDMA customer base through innovative applications, superior network quality and service and attractive value-propositions," said Mr. S.P. Shukla, President, Wireless of Reliance Communications.

The latter quote is interesting in light of an assertion by Informa Telecoms & Media that "India’s Reliance has also been looking to sideline CDMA for GSM/WCDMA" - a comment made in the analyst firm's Asia Pacific Mobile Market Analysis and Forecasts report, which was released this month.

That phenomenon of CDMA operators favouring the W-CDMA/HSPA flavour of mobile broadband over the CDMA family EV-DO route is, of course, not unique. The Informa report asserts that South Korea's "CDMA stalwarts" SK Telecom and KT "are vigorously pursuing HSDPA." The report contends that this will further the degree to which CDMA operators face disadvantages when competing with GSM/W-CDMA rivals, stating that "as Asia Pacific operators jump on the HSDPA bandwagon, handset pricing will continue to fall, meaning that EV-DOrA operators will struggle to compete on handset price. The same argument applies to EV-DOrA network prices."

Whichever set of numbers you choose to work with, then, (the CDG's 100 million vs. Informa's 77 million), it will be interesting to observe for how much longer India's CDMA subs growth continues and is cited as evidence for CDMA technology being in rude health.
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Monday, 18 May 2009

Nokia's cheapest emerging markets phone vs. El Vergatario

Emerging markets winner? The Nokia 2720 Fold - picture from Cellular News

Just when I'd finally recovered from the side-splitting hilarity of discussing the (allegedly) saucily-named low-cost cellphone recently launched in Venezuela, along came another emerging markets handsets story to remind me of the fun.

The (nudge, wink) Vergatario will cost the man and woman on the streets of Caracas a mere USD15. It's recently been reported in the press that this represents only 25% of the cost of manufacturing and distributing the device. According to the country's state news agency, there is "a long-term project to export phones from Venezuela to the rest of Latin America". It will be interesting to see whether the Chavez Government would be interested in subsidising cheap phones for the masses beyond the borders of their Bolivarian Republic. Last year, I had the opportunity to visit the HQ of Venezuela's renationalised national incumbent wireline operator, CANTV. I learned a little about the company's (and the Government's) desire to use ICT/telecoms as a driver of Bolivarian socialism - but not enough to speculate with any degree of confidence about whether this could include underwriting the cost of handsets in markets where CANTV's mobile unit, Movilnet, would not have the opportunity to recoup the subsidies during the subscription lifecycle of the customer. I suppose it's theoretically possible that an arrangement could be worked out with friendly operators elsewhere in Latin America, or even elsewhere in the world.

Let's assume for a moment that something of that sort does not turn out to be feasible. With which handsets would a non-subsidised El Vergatario be competing on the global low cost devices market?

One suite of such handsets has been launched recently by Nokia, according to a Cellular News item I received today. The Finnish device maker says the new phones are aimed at emerging markets and come preloaded with a range of Nokia's mobile internet services. The Nokia 2730 classic, Nokia 2720 fold and Nokia 7020 each come Internet-ready, and work with Nokia's range of emerging markets services.

The article quotes Nokia's Alex Lambeek, who says "we've seen mobile technologies catalyze the growth of the informal sector across the world, empowering local entrepreneurs and having an immediate and lasting impact on people's lives. Services like Nokia Life Tools and Ovi Mail, combined with the mobile phones we're launching today, bring powerful solutions that can be the gateway to knowledge, entertainment and people, without the need for a PC."

According to extensive Nokia consumer research, states the article, nearly 50% of consumers in emerging markets would indeed rather connect to the Internet over a mobile phone than a PC.

An interesting component of Nokia's service bundle is Ovi Mail, "which has the potential to be the first digital identity for many people in emerging markets" Unlike most other email services, the Cellular News article reminds us, "an Ovi Mail account can be created and used directly on a Nokia device without ever having to use a PC." The article indicates that since the launch of the beta service in December 2008, around 90% of Ovi Mail accounts have been created on a Nokia phone rather than a PC.

How do these devices stack up price-wise against the Venezuelan phone?

The most affordable of the set of three is the Nokia 2720 Fold, a compact clamshell handset expected to begin shipping in Q3 2009 for an estimated retail price of EUR 55 (USD74) before subsidies and taxes. By my maths, El Vergatario comes in at around USD60 when not subsidised by the Venezuelan state, so it does look competitively priced vs. a comparable device from Nokia. The Venezuelan handset, however, is a CDMA standard device. Presumably a GSM version would need to be on offer if the Chavez Government really does mean to export the phone.


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Tuesday, 12 May 2009

CDMA to GSM migration: another one jumps ship in Africa

Reports of the death of CDMA have been greatly exaggerated. That has been the theme of of few articles I've posted here. In March I blogged on claims made about the standard being in rude health in Nigeria. A month earlier, I was writing about operators betting on CDMA in India. That article, however, did report on the seemingly unstoppable rise of the GSM family and the constantly eroded global market share of CDMA. Contributing to this trend is the phenomenon of former CDMA operators migrating to the more successful technology. An example of this is currently underway in Africa.

I learned via Telegeography yesterday that Rwandan mobile operator Rwandatel is continuing to switch users from CDMA mobile phones to 3G-enabled GSM handsets.

According to the article, which quotes RwandaTel CEO Patrick Kariningufu, the MNO is handing out new GSM handsets to an estimated 20,000 subscribers mainly located in rural areas. The move is said to be part of the company's response to increased competition.

The country's mobile market is currently split two ways - but the slices are very differently sized. MTN's Rwanda outpost has 82.61% of the country's subscriptions according to WCIS. Until late last year, Rwandatel, as a purely CDMA operator, was doing OK in terms of slowly chipping away at MTN's dominant position. The decision to migrate to GSM/W-CDMA was made some time ago, however. A Global Mobile Daily note of December 5th indicates that while the new network was launched around that time, the operator, a unit of Libya's Lap Green, had hoped to make the move to GSM earlier last year but was prevented from doing so by equipment shipping delays caused by the post-election violence in Kenya.

Both cellcos will be preparing for the impact of a new challenge to the status quo. This comes in the form of a soon-to-be-launched Tigo-branded MNO, the newest part of the Millicom International Cellular empire.

In November, GMD reported that Millicom had been awarded Rwanda's third mobile operating license by the Rwanda Utilities Regulatory Agency, which reportedly rejected competing bids from Zain and Telecel Globe, a company owned by Orascom Telecom. Millcom's new operation will offer mobile and fixed-line services.

Market-watchers will be interested to see if Rwandatel's migration to GSM will be enough for the operator to compete effectively vs. this new entrant and the well-established MTN operation.
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Friday, 6 February 2009

GSM vs. CDMA: the battle goes on?

One of the most rewarding aspects of being part of Informa Telecoms & Media's Com World Series team was having the opportunity to learn about regions which I had not previously studied or visited. Previously, while creating and hosting telecoms sector conferences for other companies, my travels had taken me to North America, Central & Eastern Europe and to Russia. My Com World Series brief took me further afield. In addition to already familiar territory, regions I covered in the Informa role included the Middle East , India/South Asia and Latin America.

In the last of these regions, my visits began at what felt like the relatively advanced stages of a protracted cellular network standard battle between the GSM and CDMA camps. A key partner in the delivery of the GSM Americas/Americas Com events in which I was involved was 3G Americas, an association founded in 2002, with a mission to unite "mobile operators and manufacturers in the Americas to provide a single voice to represent the GSM family of wireless technologies – GSM, GPRS, EDGE, and UMTS/HSDPA."

The 3G Americas President, Chris Pearson and the association's Latin America Director Erasmo Rojas led an Executive Briefing session at each of the Americas Com conferences delivered under my watch. They did a great job of rounding up CxO-level participants from key South American MNOs. I don't think they would mind me saying that on both occassions Chris's opening presentation really banged the drum for the GSM family in terms of describing advantages over rival standards.

I cannot be sure to what extent 3G Americas has been instrumental to the Western Hemisphere's migration away from CDMA technology in favour of the GSM flavour, but that migration has been significant. The graphic below, taken from the 3G Americas website (and drawn from Informa Telecoms & Media WCIS figures), shows how GSM has prevailed in the opening years of this new century:

It is worth pointing out that the non-GSM subscriptions are now, for the most part, in North America. In the USA and Canada, it is estimated that there currently exist around 153 million CDMA connections. GSM subscriptions across these two markets number around 104 million and W-CDMA lines have just reached the 20 million mark.

Looking further south, Informa Telecoms & Media estimated that in the 'Americas' region (all markets in the Western Hemisphere except the USA and Canada), there were almost 400 million GSM subscriptions and just 40.6 million CDMA subscriptions by the end of December 2008. Of these CDMA lines, the two most significant chunks were the 11.7 million connections in Brazil and the 15.8 million in Venezuela. In the case of Brazil, a single operator, Vivo, accounts for all the CDMA subscriptions.

When I looked up these figures today, I was a little surprised that Vivo, a joint Telefónica-Portugal Telecom operation, still has so many subscribers on its CDMA network. The last time I was looking closely at developments at Vivo, which was back in about May 2008, I was under the impression the company planned to shift all of its CDMA mobile subscribers to its newer GSM network. That process is certainly happening - but at nothing like the speed I imagined.

In Venezuela, the vast majority of the CDMA connections are owned by renationalised Movilnet, which has an estimated 11.3 million subscribers - vs. the 4.5 million CDMA connections of rival Movistar. Unlike Movilnet, the Telefónica-backed Venezuelan MNO has been steadily shifting users to a GSM network since March 2006. However, the state-owned cellco is also, finally, making the move to GSM. In December last year, Global Mobile Daily reported that billing vendor Amdocs has deployed a billing solution to support Movilnet's new GSM network.

We can therefore expect continuing developments in Latin America to impact upon the next version of the above graphic. Look out for further erosion in the non-GSM networks' share of Western Hemisphere mobile subscriptions.

One might infer from all of this that CDMA is a technology in quick decline towards an inevitable demise. However, recent news items from India lead me to believe that the GSM-CDMA battle is very much a live one in that country.

Earlier this week, I spotted that Sistema Shyam TeleServices is potentially looking at more acquisitions in order to gain better access to the Indian market. The company, a joint venture between majority shareholder Sistema of Russia and India's Shyam Group, was among operators to get new licences in early 2008. The nascent cellco is aiming to offer CDMA-based mobile services across the country before the middle of 2010. A Business Line/Hindu Group article dated Jan 30th quotes Vsevolod Rozanov, President and CEO, Sistema Shyam TeleServices, who says "We are open to any opportunities for acquiring a mobile services company in India to speed up our roll out plans. However, there are not too many CDMA operators in the country who are looking to sell their business." Asked specifically about well-established CDMA MNO Reliance Communications, Rozanov said, "Yes we can look at Reliance’s business if they are willing to sell. However, I do not think that is the case." According to the article Reliance was, at some unspecified recent time "considering a merger deal with South Africa-based telecom player MTN."

When the full gravity of the global economic downturn started to become clear to us all last year, I sensed that one casualty might be the international expansion plans of Russia's leading telecoms groups. In that context, Sistema's apparent willingness to spend money on growing its Indian CDMA operation suggests to me not only confidence in the Indian market but also a belief that the CDMA standard is up to the task of supporting attractive, well-priced and future-proof services.

Another sign that CDMA is to be taken seriously in India is the recent, strongly worded response of the COAI (Cellular Operators' Association of India) to reported plans on the part of one operator to make EV-DO data cards available on the market. The COAI is a club of GSM operators, a group that must surely be frustrated by the ongoing delays in the licensing of spectrum for 3G and WiMAX services. Telecoms.com reported today that having already put the spectrum auctions off until this year, because of the government's failure to clear the relevant radio spectrum in all operating regions ('circles' in the local jargon), new delays are anticipated in the wake of proposals to double the base price of the licences.

India's GSM players, then, are clearly concerned about being outpaced by CDMA operators. An article in yesterday's Economic Times says that COAI Director General T.V. Ramachandran has written to the country's telecoms Minister to seek assurances that no private player should be allowed to launch EV-DO service without 3G being made available to all players. The article states that according to the COAI, the launch of EV-DO services would be unfair to the GSM operators as "CDMA operators have ample spectrum to offer both 2G as well as 3G services and this can result in [giving] unfair anti-competitive advantage to CDMA and tilt the playing field to the disadvantage of the private GSM operators".

I daresay Mr Ramachandran and his colleagues will make a strong and persuasive case. During my stint running the Com World Series Indian event I had the pleasure of meeting the COAI Director General several times. One memory stands out. In 2007 I was asked to have lunch with Mr Ramachandran and his guests from various Indian government agencies at the conference. One of the guests, on agreeing with a point made by the COAI head, gave me a useful piece of advice about keeping tabs on telco sector developments in India. "If you want to know," said my neighbour at the lunch table, "watch T.V." I will indeed keep an eye out for more on this story. I am interested to see if the COAI can indeed prevail in their argument that EV-DO gives CDMA operators an unfair advantage over GSM operators struggling with further delays to their own 3G plans.

All of this makes me look back and smile at a very simplistic remark made to me years ago by one of my first bosses at a telecoms sector conference company. It was one of his tasks to set me on the path of cutting through the then-forbidding tangle of telco jargon. "CDMA is dead," he told me. "You only need to worry about GSM". I don't think that can have been true then given that it's abundantly clear that it's not correct even now.


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