Posts Tagged ‘AT&T’

LTE: US, China Will be Top Markets

Thursday, November 24th, 2011
RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share

The United States will be the top Long Term Evolution  market globally, as ranked by subscriptions, through 2015, when it will be overtaken by China, says Informa Telecoms & Media.

By 2016, there will be 100 million LTE subscribers in the United States and 613 million LTE subscribers worldwide. This accelerated growth has been driven, in part, by Verizon Wireless’ early commercial LTE launch in December 2010, which will have more than four million LTE subscribers at end-2011, representing 63 percent of total global LTE subscribers.

LTE has already changed competitive dynamics in the U.S. wireless market, Informa argues.  Since launching LTE in December 2010 and the iPhone in February 2011, Verizon has gained market share on AT&T and most other U.S. operators apart from MetroPCS, which launched LTE in September 2010.

Verizon has increased its share of US mobile subscriptions from 31 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010, when it launched LTE, to 33 percent in the second quarter of 2011,” says Mike Roberts, principal analyst at Informa Telecoms & Media.

While the iPhone was the larger driver of Verizon’s share gains early in 2011, LTE is accelerating and will be the key driver from 2012 onwards. “Verizon has added around 2 to 2.3 million iPhone subscriptions every quarter in 2011, but new LTE subscriptions nearly tripled from 500,000 in the first quarter 2011 to 1.4 million in the third quarter of 2011,” Roberts says.

Also, LTE accounted for 53 percent of Verizon’s total postpaid net subscriber additions in the third quarter of 2011, up from 30 percent in the second quarter.

AT&T launched LTE in September 2011. Sprint has also just announced plans to launch LTE in mid-2012, and to migrate its 4G WiMAX subscriptions to LTE. Sprint has about eight million 4G WiMAX subscriptions in service.

Leap Wireless is launching LTE in December 2011 and US Cellular plans to launch in March 2012.

The U.S. market is the exception rather than the rule in the global LTE market. U.S. to lead LTE market


RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share

Sprint Issues Big Backhaul RFP

Thursday, September 29th, 2011
RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share

Sprint Nextel Corp. has issued a big request for proposal for fiber-based cellular backhaul, and AT&T, Time Warner Cable and Comcast Corp. are poised to grab most of the initial buildout.

Sprint, like other mobile service providers, has to better match backhaul bandwidth to the radio bandwidth its Long Term Evolution networks will represent.

Sprint isn’t saying how much of its $5 billion upgrade is tied to a backhaul upgrade, but its strategy will give cable operators an opportunity to expand their share of the cell backhaul market.

U.S. cable operators currently provide backhaul to seven percent of the nation’s 253,000-plus cell sites, representing about 18,200 sites, according to Heavy Reading senior analyst Alan Breznick. He estimates that Time Warner Cable has at least 7,600, followed by Comcast (6,000-plus),Cox Communications Inc. (2,000-plus) and Charter Communications Inc. (about 1,000).

Breznick says U.S. cable operators ended 2010 with about $200 million in cell backhaul revenues and expects that number to rise to $500 million this year as cable ops expand their presence to more than 25,000 cell sites.

Sprint to Place Big Backhaul Bet


RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share

Has U.S. Wireless Market Reached Limit of Competitor Size?

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011
RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share

In any mature market, there comes a point where the biggest players simply are not allowed to get any bigger. That might be the case for the U.S. mobile industry.

Department of Justice Acting Assistant Attorney General Sharis A. Pozen says “the conclusion we reached was clear: any way you look at this transaction, it is anti-competitive.”

“T-Mobile has been an important source of competition among the national carriers through innovation and quality enhancements,” Pozen says. “Unless this merger is blocked, competition and innovation in the mobile wireless market, in the form of low prices and innovative wireless handsets, operating systems, and calling plans, will be diminished and consumers will suffer.”

A combination of AT&T and T-Mobile would reduce the number of nationwide competitors in the marketplace from four to three, and the DoJ appears to believe that is anti-competitive, at least this particular pairing.

DoJ outlines rationale


RSS Feed Subscribe to EtherNEWS Bookmark and Share