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NEWS
WiMAX in Latin America
Emerging regions have long been a focus
for fixed wireless vendors. Actively selling to areas in need of basic
telecommunication infrastructure makes perfect sense; it will not only allow
the vendor to keep producing more gear, it also allows the potential for a long
and lucrative series of contracts that will only lead to more interest and more
utilization.
For WiMAX vendors this will be no different and in many
developing regions WiMAX will do well, mostly being used for fixed
applications. When ranking these areas, Visant sees Latin America,
including Mexico, as one of the better regions to start with.
Population The Latin America region is home to
550 million persons. Population growth is approximately 1.5% per year according
the UN, a decline from the peak 2.5% recorded during the early 50's but a
sizable population nonetheless.
Households Housing shows a different trend than population. The region
is expected to add over 75 million new households by 2025 to its existing 130
million. Decline of extended and nuclear families is considered the cause and
the trend is good news for broadband and telephone providers who tend to light
up households rather than people.
Income Per capita in the region is $7,000 but wealth is heavily
concentrated; it is common for the top 10% of wage earners to control 35% to
50% of wealth. In addition, per capita in 13 of the total 30 nations in the
region is sub $4,000 per year on average. According to CIA statistics, 200
million of the 550 million Latin American residents live in poverty.
The emerging handset initiative for low-cost GSM voice communications
is expected to experience the greatest impact on low income segments of the
Latin American community in the next five to ten years.
Great Population
Density for WiMAX Population density is also factor when we consider the
opportunity for WiMAX in Latin America. According to the
UN, over 75% of the region's populace lives within urbanized areas and one
third of the population live in cities with one million or more inhabitants.
That makes Latin America one of the most urbanized areas in the emerging world and it also has ramifications
for BWA and WiMAX.
Together with income distribution trends, it suggests
deployments of fixed and mobile systems will be focused on urban areas and
typically with a moderate number of base stations despite overall population
density, to address the upper financial echelons within these cities; this is
already the case with existing cellular and fixed wireless systems.
Although not necessarily good news for base station sales,
this is still good news overall. A substantial number of potential subscribers
can be covered with a limited number of base stations and hence investment,
which lowers risks to operators. This applies equally to fixed and any next
generation mobile networks such as 802.16e which might be deployed, though
operators might need to supplement coverage with GSM/GPRS or another wireless
air interface choice outside of the core coverage areas.
Penetration of
Existing Communications Services Teledensity in Latin America lingers
at roughly 20% which is well below the 60% or more figure common in leading
economies. Mobile phone penetration stands at 35% and broadband penetration is
below 15% when considering households in the region. There is evidently room to
grow within the region but again, growth is typically nurtured by other factors
such as equipments pricing, system economics, and the financial status of the
area's inhabitants rather than the potential for use.
Proven Business
Models First Mobile voice is a proven business model throughout the
world. Further reductions in the already low cost of GSM infrastructure and the
emerging handset initiative will extend the serviceable market for mobile voice
throughout Latin America. Pursuit of this opportunity is
a no-brainer, as it is already proven. We should expect investment to flow in
this direction first.
The same may apply in the case of fixed wireless. Carriers
in the region are proving a model which relies on fixed voice and 56K to ISDN
type of data rates for residential users and high speed links via 5.8 GHz links
for enterprise. That model may prove to be more attractive than a mobile WiMAX
approach, though mobile WiMAX itself could be used to address the fixed market.
Competition WiMAX is not alone. 802.20, FLASH-OFDM, UMTS TDD, and
subsequent releases from UMTS all address the same fixed and mobile
opportunities and all will share similar feature sets including intelligent
antennas support, IP core network, efficient MAC layer as WiMAX. UMTS TDD and
FLASH-OFDM have substantial leads in commercialization as both are already up
and running in commercial networks and both are veterans of years of trials
with major mobile carriers such as T-Mobile, Nextel, Sprint, Vodafone, and Orange.
Our Expectations Alvarion, Airspan, and traditional fixed cellular vendors
such as Tellular are experiencing substantial growth (in excess of 30% per year)
from Latin American operators who seek to deploy fixed wireless networks. Yearly
contracts were roughly $200 million from the region in total in 2005.
We expect growth in excess of 30% per year for the next 3 years
to 5 years as existing carriers fill out their networks with subscribers and other
carriers and investors become more comfortable with the business model, which
is greatly facilitated by lower equipment costs. Proprietary systems and fixed
cellular systems will continue to account for the lion's share of these
revenues through 2007 but leading vendors such as Alvarion and Airspan are
expected to shift their existing clients to WiMAX over the next several years.
This is a summary of the just released report "WiMAX
in Latin America: Room To Move," published in February 2006 by Visant
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