$789 million to be spent on SDM by 2013

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Even though the capital expenditure (capex) budgets of telecom operators has sharply decreased due to the global economic situation, expenditure on the subscriber data management (SDM) solutions is expected to increase in the high double-digit percents annually for at least the next four years. This forecast has been given by Infonetics Research.

A prediction in the growth of SDM market to $789 million in 2013 has also been predicted by the research company. By allowing the operators to extract, normalize, analyze, and pass on valuable subscriber information to their marketing teams, SDM act as strategic tools that can help them better monetize their existing assets.

The SDM investment in Europe is drove by machine-to-machine (M2M) market and the trend is also expected in North America in coming years.  Interest in 3G data offload is also acting as a catalyst in SDM investments as operators, while maintaining a consistent subscriber experience, effortlessly shift traffic onto their own or their partners’ Wi-Fi networks.

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Aug. 16 (Bloomberg) — T-Mobile USA Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. made the highest offers for U.S. airwaves at a government auction, driving the bidding past $10 billion. T-Mobile, the fourth-biggest
U.S. mobile-phone company, offered $3.05 billion for 77 licenses, according to preliminary results released today by the Federal Communications Commission. Verizon, owner of the second-largest
U.S. wireless provider, offered $2.8 billion for four licenses, including $1.34 billion for the biggest in the northeastern region. Through 20 rounds of the auction, telephone companies have been the most aggressive in trying to expand their coverage to offer more customers high-speed services. The bids are preliminary and the FCC will hold more rounds tomorrow, giving other companies a chance to top today’s offers. The process may last weeks before winners are announced.

“In the end it comes down to willingness to spend,” said Jeff Heynen, an analyst covering broadband and Internet television at Infonetics Research in
Raleigh, North Carolina. “Telcos are the only guys that have the funds to be able to do that.” A joint venture between EchoStar Communications Corp. and DirecTV Group Inc., the two largest
U.S. satellite-television companies, dropped out of the running. The auction of the 1,122 spectrum licenses, which reached $10.3 billion today, may raise as much as $15 billion, making it the FCC’s second-most lucrative sale, according to government projections. Widening, Deepening T-Mobile, a unit of Bonn-based Deutsche Telekom AG, is aiming to catch up with larger rivals Verizon Wireless and Cingular Wireless LLC in offering videos and games.

New York-based Verizon wants more users for services such as mobile video and has leading bids in the
Great Lakes and southeastern regions. “For T-Mobile it’s widening and for Verizon it’s deepening,” Heynen said. T-Mobile, owned by Deutsche Telekom AG, is making its biggest bids in the western, northeastern and central regions. SpectrumCo LLC, a partnership that includes Comcast Corp., Time Warner Cable Inc., and Sprint Nextel Corp., was the third- biggest bidder, offering $1.54 billion for 79 licenses. “Cable companies as expected are being somewhat restrained and we view their participation as experimental,” said Aryeh Bourkoff, an analyst at UBS AG in
New York. Shares of Verizon fell 16 cents to $34.23 in composite trading today on the New York Stock Exchange. Deutsche Telekom shares rose 16 cents to 11.21 euros in
Germany. EchoStar, located in
Englewood, Colorado, added 15 cents to $33.11, and El Segundo, California-based DirecTV gained 27 cents to $18.06.

Source : Bloomberg

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