Click to navigate back to homepage
Thursday, January 8, 2009 
  Search :



 
 
     
 
 
Business News & Technology News > Nov 2008
 
 

Have We Seen an End to Mobile Broadband Price Wars?

(Business News & Technology News, 26 Nov 2008)


The Swedish daily Dagens Industri reported this week that Telia, the Swedish incumbent fixed and mobile operator, is planning to increase its mobile broadband subscription prices. According to Analysys Mason, the move highlights the operator's need to ensure a positive return on its investments—something Telia acknowledges that the current pricing models make difficult.

MNOs in Sweden, like those in many other European countries, are racing to sign up mobile broadband customers. This has inevitably resulted in price wars in Sweden and elsewhere. "Swedish MNOs seem to have gone slightly further than many of their European counterparts," says James Allen, Partner at Analysys Mason. "They have introduced unlimited usage subscription packages at low prices, thus essentially positioning mobile broadband as a substitute for fixed broadband."

"These aggressively priced offerings have surely succeeded in driving growth in the market—during 2007, the number of mobile broadband subscribers increased from 92,000 to almost 376,000—but there is a disadvantage to this approach. As a Telia representative put it: 'We need to find new models instead of fixed monthly fees, otherwise it will be difficult to run this business'," explains Allen.

Rupert Wood, Principal Analyst at Analysys Mason, says that many MNOs, facing saturated markets and limited opportunities to increase ARPU, have embraced mobile broadband as the new driver of growth. But, as Wood states in his recent report, "Mobile Broadband: Another Substitution Threat for Fixed Operators?", MNOs are generally offering mobile broadband services for less than their fully allocated cost.

"It may make sense to fill networks with inexpensive mobile data traffic rather than leave them empty, but there will clearly be a point where the economics change. Telia seems to have foreseen this point and is taking steps to protect its investments. The reaction from consumers and competitors will be a critical factor in whether it succeeds," says Wood. "It is worth noting that the mobile broadband market in Sweden is following a similar path to the country's fixed broadband market. Fixed broadband providers also went through price wars on flat tariff offerings, followed by a phase of price increases as the market matured. It will be interesting to see whether mobile broadband prices in other markets will also follow the Swedish example, or whether fixed broadband operators will move in a similar direction and start to introduce new types of broadband tariff that are more related to usage than peak speed."

Click here for more information on Analysys Mason

 
 
 
 
Related Articles
   

Mouser Electronics and CalAmp Ink Global Distribution Agreement

NXP Appoints Richard Clemmer as CEO

CDG Endorses Indonesian Telecoms International Summit 2009

Parks Associates Forecasts 4.5B Mobile Phone Users Worldwide by 2013

Emerging Markets and Data will Drive Global Mobile Growth to 2013

Synchronous Boost Regulator Offers Output Disconnect and Programmable Input Current Limit

LG Develops World's First LTE Handset Modem Chip

Digital PMR/LMR: The Way Forward

Riding Out the Recession

Nokia Makes Mobile Advertising its First Chinese Investment

   
 
Top News
   

ECS EliteGroup Demos First Dual-mode Mobile WiMAX/EDGE Device

Emerging Markets and Data will Drive Global Mobile Growth to 2013

China Approves 3G Licenses

China's Handset Industry Growth Slowed Down in 2H08

Toshiba, SGI Japan Develop Full HD File-based Program Broadcasting Systems

   
 
 
 
Industry Links
Photonics Association (Singapore)
Singapore Industrial Automation Association (SIAA)
Taiwan Semiconductor Industry Association (TSIA)
   
   
 
 
 


 
 
Technical Channels

Amplifiers

Components

Digital Hardware/components

Integrated components

Integrated subsystems

Interface/interconect

Materials

Passives

Power

Semis/ICs/Mmics

Services

Signal Processing

Signal Sources

Software

Test & Measurement

Transmission Components

Wireless Protocols

 

Other Websites
EDN Asia
EDN Asia (India)
EDN Asia (Taiwan)
EDN Asia (Korea)
ECN Asia
ECN Asia (Korea)
ECN Asia (Taiwan)
  ECN Asia (China)
  EB Asia
Electronics Asia
Reed Electronic Group
Reed Business Information Asia
   
 

© 2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc.
All rights reserved. Use of this web site is subject to its Terms and Conditions of Use. View our Privacy Policy.