Advanced Info 2011 EBITDA margin to ease to 45% (Thailand)

Advanced Info Service PCL expects its EBITDA margin to edge lower this year to 45% from 46.8% in 2010 due to an expected rise in handset sales, which yield narrower margins than services revenue.

According to Nattiya Poapongsakorn, investor relations manager, the company expects service revenue growth, excluding interconnection fee, at 4% this year.

Advanced Info booked a 7.9% growth in service revenue to US$2.87 billion last year.

According to Nattiya, Thailand’s largest mobile phone company by subscribers expects to gain around US$9.80 billion to US$13.70 billion from interconnection fees, down from US$19.64 billion last year. Meanwhile, data revenue is expected to surge 25%-30% this year, due to cheaper smart phones and the growing popularity of social networking.

Data revenue jumped 30.5% last year to US$490.2 million.

Nattiya added that the company has budgeted marketing expenses for this year at 2.5%-3% of revenue,  which is higher by 2.1% spent last year.

ZTE launches zVOA to empower converged voice and multimedia

ZTE Corporation, a leading global provider of telecommunications equipment and network solutions, today launched its zVOA (ZTE Voice & Video over Any-access) solution to enable operators to deploy a unified control network for voice, video and multimedia services over any existing mobile and fixed access network infrastructure.

With the introduction of LTE and WiMAX network technologies, widespread deployment of broadband access technologies such as HSPA+ and Wi-Fi, and the increasing popularity of multi-mode smart phones, consumers have come to expect a continuous and consistent service experience in spite of different broadband access points. IMS-based VoIP and multimedia services are fast becoming a new area of growth for network operators. However achieving cost-efficiency in their networks remains a challenge for many.

ZTE’s zVOA solution addresses these issues to utilize on existing traditional voice network, broadband pipe and end-user resources to offer more multimedia services. The solution is low cost, easy to maintain and easily upgraded. This allows network operators to smoothly deploy VoLTE, VOBB and multimedia networks, and maintain their competitive edge by offering more services to end users.

Key to the zVOA solution is the introduction of the iCX (intelligent Controller eXtensive) and iMG (integrative Media Gateway) products. The iCX product integrates standard mobile and fixed softswitches, and IMS call control elements, while the iMG product incorporates media functions with integrated voice, video and other content types.

The solution employs state of the art virtualization technology and Cloud Computing technology on ZTE¢â‚¬â„¢s advanced ETCA hardware platform and software middleware to enable flexible deployment and maximize the processing capabilities.

The solution fully complies with a variety of standard interfaces of circuit switched (CS) elements and IMS elements, and can integrate all standard softswitches and IMS functions onto one shelf or even on one single board, allowing for a much smooth expansion process.

The zVOA solution is an ideal way to help operators expand markets with freedom and have voice & video anytime anywhere, using any fixed or mobile access,¢â‚¬ said Liu Jianye, Chief Architect of ZTE Core Network Products.

“In meeting the future development trend and demands of core networks, the zVOA solution fully inherits the functions of traditional voice networks, while at the same time offering carrier-grade VoIP and multimedia services over both legacy phones and new smart phones based on standard IMS architecture such as MMTel, converged Centrex, converged one number, DRVCC and SRVCC.

Turkcell Introduces “Dual Carrier” Technology to Turkey and Doubles Mobile Internet Speed

Turkcell, the leading communications and technology company in Turkey, is delighted to announce that it will introduce “Dual Carrier” technology to Turkey and so become one of only ten companies in the world to use this latest technology.

Turkcell’s 3G network will be made compatible with Dual Carrier technology and will support mobile internet speeds of up to 42 Mbps. DC-HSDPA technology, which enables to use 2 frequency at the same time, will double the speed at which Turkcell subscribers are able to use mobile Internet via compatible modems and smart phones.

Commenting, Turkcell’s Chief Network Operations Officer, Ilter Terzioglu, said: “Turkcell will continue to invest in the latest technology and allow our customers to enjoy a very high speed, high quality mobile internet experience. Mobile internet becomes even more meaningful with ‘instant access’ and Dual Carrier technology is a new advance in 3G/HSDPA technology, which significantly increases the maximum speed available to customers. We will complete the update of our network as soon as possible. We will soon double mobile internet speed, allowing our subscribers to use Turkcell 3G VINN at 43.2 Mbps. We are aiming to achieve higher mobile internet revenues in accordance with the increasing smart phones as well as the higher data usage at faster speeds.”

About Turkcell

Turkcell is the leading communications and technology company in Turkey with 33.9 million postpaid and prepaid customers and a market share of approximately 55% as of September 30, 2010 (Source: Our estimations, operator’s and the Telecommunication Authority’s announcements). Turkcell provides high quality data and voice services to approximately 80% of the Turkish population through its 3G technology supported network and to 99.07% of the Turkish population through its 2G technology supported network. Turkcell reported TRY2.3 billion ($1.5 billion) net revenue for the period ended September 30, 2010 and its total assets reached TRY14.5 billion ($10.0 billion) as of September 30, 2010. Turkcell has become one of the first operators among the global operators to have implemented HSDPA+ and to reach to 42.2 Mbps speed with HSPA multi carrier solution. Turkcell is a leading regional player and has interests in international mobile operations in Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Northern Cyprus and Ukraine which, together with its Turkish operations, had approximately 60.4 million subscribers as of September 30, 2010. Turkcell has been listed on the NYSE and the ISE since July 2000 and is the only NYSE listed company in Turkey and is among the top 15% of companies listed on NYSE by its size as of October 2010. 51.00% of Turkcell’s share capital is held by Turkcell Holding, 0.05% by ƒâ€¡ukurova Holding, 13.07% by Sonera Holding, 2.32% by M.V. Group and 0.01% by others while the remaining 33.55% is free float. Read more at http://www.turkcell.com.tr/en

Safaricom Plans to bank on its lead in 3G infrastructure

Kenya’s biggest mobile-phone company, Safaricom Ltd. is planning to capitalize on its lead in 3G infrastructure by selling laptops and offering services to new and existing customers.

The company is the only operator of a 3G telecommunications network in Kenya.  According to Chief Executive Officer Bob Collymore, in the first half of its fiscal year, Safaricom became the biggest importer of laptops in the country as it seeks to boost Internet access in the East African country. The company has mobile data; the other companies don’t have mobile data. So what they have to do is take advantage of that lead. The company thinks they have about an 18-month lead before they catch up to the point where they are.

Most of the mobile operators like Safaricom, Bharti Airtel Ltd. (Kenyan unit ) and Telkom Kenya Ltd. are becoming more dependent on data for revenue after the industry regulator in August halved the rates that operators charge each other to connect calls across networks to US$0.03. That generated a round of cuts in call costs by companies to less than US$0.02 per minute and in some cases free calls during off-peak hours.

Collymore added that the so-called interconnection costs may be reduced further. In July the company will see a further cut in interconnection tariffs to less than US$0.02. Average revenue per user in the company’s voice business fell 13 % to US$4 million in the first half.

Operators are betting that increased data traffic will make up for the lower voice revenue and are offering customers laptops, net books or smart phones to attract new clients.

According to Informa Telecoms & Media, a London-based research group, by 2015, there will be 265 million mobile broadband subscriptions in Africa, up from about 12 million at the end of September.

As per Collymore, Safaricom imported 40,000 laptops in the last six months till September. The company reported 15% increase in first-half profit  and also bought 400,000 data-enabled handsets, or smartphones, and sold 45,000 data modems.

Collymore noted that customers using Safaricom’s data services surged 92% to 3.61 million people in the six months through September from a year earlier. About 839 base stations, or 37% of the total, are enabled to transmit 3G signals, which enable faster Internet browsing and downloading. Safaricom intends to increase that ratio to 50% within two years.  Safaricom will also seek more licenses to provide additional services to its more than 16.7 million customers.

Safaricom is 40% owned by Vodafone Plc, the world’s biggest mobile-phone operator. Vodacom Group, the largest provider of mobile phone services to South Africans, is 65% held by Vodafone.

Motorola plans to split in early 2011

Motorola is planning to split in early 2011. The company plan with one half containing its consumer-focused mobile phone and television set-top box products, and the other holding divisions that target business customers.

The company will now have two co-CEOs, Sanjay Jha and Greg Brown, running the separate companies.  Sanjay Jha will focus on Motorola’s entertainment and consumer-oriented devices, including smart phones like the Droid, and Brown on high-tech business solutions.

Greg Brown, the company’s other co-CEO, will head the enterprise mobility and networks businesses. The enterprise mobility division makes products like handheld devices for warehouse workers and bar-code scanners.

The networks business comprises building out cell phone towers and setting up fiber-optic cable lines to enable the spread of high-speed Internet connections.

The split will offer existing shareholders a share in each new company, which will be roughly the same size in terms of annual revenue at US$11 billion. Both halves will be publicly traded.

According to Greg Brown, the company believes this configuration is cleaner and more compelling for customers and investors. The company do anticipates that both business segments will have positive operating cash flow moving forward.

Two newer phones based on Google Inc.’s Android operating system, the Cliq and the Droid, have received a positive response , and according to Motorola, it shipped 2 million units in the fourth quarter. Motorola’s Android-based Devour will go on sale in March through Verizon Wireless. The company plans to launch 20 smart phones this year alone.

According to Jha, smart phones will be increasingly wedded to television set-top boxes as video is watched on multiple devices. Motorola’s mobile-device business will be profitable in the fourth quarter of this year. Together, mobile devices and the home business are uniquely positioned to be a leader in the largest opportunity in technology today, the convergence of mobility, media, and the Internet.

Both the company will continue to use the Motorola brand name, with the mobile device side holding it and licensing it royalty-free to the other.

Samsung collaborates with Netbiscuits for hybrid mobile apps

Netbiscuits creates native hybrid apps for Samsung bada to leverage content and services of premium customers on Samsung smart phones.  All apps will be implemented as native hybrid applications, a combination of website and app.

The first Netbiscuits customer will be enabled with Samsung bada native hybrid apps include Axel Springer, Spiegel Online, IDG Germany and kicker online. The new apps will provide access to services like Immonet.de, Spiegel Mobil, PC-Welt, GameStar, CIO, TechChannel, ComputerWoche, kicker Mobil and Stau Mobil. Equally, leading German news and economy magazines Focus, Handelsblatt and Wirtschaftswoche launch Netbiscuits native hybrid apps for Samsung bada. All apps will be available in Samsung Apps, an integrated application store for Samsung bada smart phones.

Samsung bada apps made by Netbiscuits get applied as native hybrid applications, a convincing concept of combining mobile website and native app features. Accordingly, Netbiscuits customers will have a central interface for managing all mobile content, whether it is requested via the mobile website or the bada app. Moreover, the benefits of utilizing an app are also being fully exploited. These include the distribution via Samsung Apps, the integrated application store for bada smart phones, the integration with bada phone features such as GPS localization, and last but not least, the high-glossy layout and screen design of bada apps.

According to Michael Neidhoefer, CEO of Netbiscuits, the company is proud to help Samsung to efficiently provide more high-quality applications for Samsung bada smart phones. Company’s native hybrid apps are the smartest way for app store operators as well as for content and service providers to take advantage of the fast growing mobile Web. The concept enables app store operators to populate their stores fast and help content and service providers to set up and manage mobile websites and apps cross-platform in a cost-efficient way using Netbiscuits cloud-based software system.

Smartphones costlier: Verizon tells FCC

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: In order to break service contracts for smart phones, Verizon Wireless has doubled the fees on the customers. According to Verizon, the difference between what it pays manufacturers for phones and what it
charges contract customers is more than twice as large for smart phones as it is for standard cell phones.

The explanation was given after Federal Communications Commission asked the carrier to tell the reason behind doubling the maximum early termination fee for smart phones to $350 from $175. Earlier, Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, said the FCC needs to increase its oversight of the wireless industry and improve its enforcement of consumer protection rules.

Smartphones takes more time for sales and customer service workers to help customers understand advanced features and functions on the handsets, thereby increasing the cost. Verizon has also been inquired by FCC about $1.99-a-megabyte data access fees that have appeared on the bills of customers who don’t have data plans but who accidentally initiate data access by pressing a button on their phones.

In reply, Verizon has said when customer starts using a data service but then quickly shuts it off, the fees is not charged.

Google phone to contract T Mobile USA by Jan next year

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Google will enter into a contract with T Mobile USA to sell one of the versions of its own-branded cell phone, while the other will be unlocked version of the touch screen phone, allowing consumers to pick a
carrier of their choice to provide wireless service.

The version linked to Deutsche Telekom’s T-Mobile USA will subsidize the cost of the phone for U.S. consumers who agree to a service contract.  HTC Passion, Dream or Nexus One are the code names for the phone, manufactured by HTC and available directly though the Google website as early as January 5.

The phone is like Apple Inc’s iPhone but will also have  other features like an exchangeable battery, a somewhat larger screen and the ability for consumers to add a memory card. Until now, Google has partnered many handset makers by offering its open-source Android software as a freely available operating system for smart phones.

Earlier, Google had said that more than a dozen phones were available with Android, including the heavily promoted Motorola Droid phone that is available with Verizon Wireless, a unit of Verizon Communications and Vodafone.

Verizon Wireless questioned by FCC regarding fee hike (America)

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: The Federal Communications Commission of the USA has asked for an explanation from Verizon Wireless regarding accidental data charges even when they terminate their contract on some of their phones.

The carrier hiked its contract termination fee from $175 to $350 for its “smart” phones in the month of November. Verizon subsidized the cost of the devices to contract-signing customers on the line of all the other carriers while smart phones cost the carrier more than regular phones.

FCC has also asked Verizon if the customers who accidentally hit Web access buttons on phones that have no data plans, are also charged? The carrier has said that the charges were already stopped a few months ago.

Samsung, LG face stalled mobile phone market growth

SINGAPORE/SEOUL: Wrestling with falling mobile phone sales and shrinking market shares, South Korea’s Samsung and LG yearn for the days when their high-tech, pricey phones were the talk of the town.

The South Korean makers face stalled volume growth whereas rivals Nokia Oyj and Motorola Inc are cashing in on trends to go slim and stylish in advanced markets or cheap in emerging markets, such as India.
Analysts say Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and LG Electronics Inc should shift their focus to low-cost phones to catch up, or take the lead, in next-generation technology phones or mobile TV handsets.
“Nokia, Motorola and Sony Ericsson have experienced tremendous growth globally over the last few years – much of this can be attributed to the low-cost handset market, an area where LG and Samsung are not particularly strong,” said Bengt Nordstrom, an analyst with wireless consultancy inCode.
Another issue has been their inability to establish a strong brand, analysts said. Nokia has the scale and brand to control the market, Motorola has achieved cult-status with its blockbuster ultra-thin RAZR, and Sony Ericsson has focused on music and photography, leveraging the Sony Walkman and Cybershot brands to enhance its appeal to younger users. “Samsung and LG’s lack of differentiation is holding them back,” Nordstrom said.
Just two years ago, Samsung was poised to overtake Motorola’s number 2 spot, but its market share is now half the size of Motorola’s, with 26.3 million phones sold against the US rival’s 51.9 million in the April-June quarter.
One reason is the RAZR. Take Chua Chin Yang, a 27-year-old Singaporean freelance writer, who ditched his Samsung C200 handset this year. “I switched to Motorola because its handset designs look better and feel better, compared with Samsung’s, which are bulky and so uncool,” said Chua. “I love the RAZR because it’s so slim, easy to carry and the materials used to make the phone are also hardy.”
Nokia saw a 29 per cent boost to 78.4 million phones, but LG yielded its number 4 position to Sony Ericsson, selling 15.3 million phones against its rival’s 15.7 million.
LG also saw Motorola and Nokia eating into its business with key operators Verizon Communications Inc and Hutchison Telecommunications, leading to losses in its handset business for the second quarter in a row.
“The two megatrends in GSM over the last two years are ultra-thins and smart phones. Samsung has underperformed in both markets,” said Strategy Analytics analyst Neil Mawston. “Samsung cannot afford to miss the next megatrend, whatever it may be.”
With a focus on advanced cellphones and a few low-cost models, Samsung and LG have also missed out on the boom in emerging markets.
“Both Samsung and LG have advanced in next-generation technologies, such as WCDMA, HSDPA, WiMax and multimedia, but these markets have not blossomed yet,” said Suran Seong, analyst with research firm Ovum. “The convergence trend where several technologies or functionalities are packed into a phone, which the Korean vendors have stressed, may not be what all users want,” she added.
LG also had a late entry into the GSM market – the dominant digital mobile standard. About 60-70 per cent of its revenues come from CDMA technology, which is facing shrinking demand. “Starting the GSM business late was one big mistake we made,” LG Electronics finance chief Y.S. Kwon told investors recently.
The world’s two 2G mobile standards are GSM and CDMA. GSM was advocated by governments of western Europe and by firms, including Ericsson and Nokia, while CDMA was backed by the US and companies like Qualcomm Inc.
“The core problem for LG is its limited GSM distribution network. It launches a cool device like the chocolate phone, but struggles to get them on operators’ shelves,” said Mawston. – Reuters

Source- http://www.btimes.com.my

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