SMS Monitored Venezuela’s Election

During the recent Presidential Election in Venezuela nearly 8 million voters used SMS to find their polling station, reports 160characters.org.

“The SMS application to handle enquiries from the 16 million registered voters to know which was their voting center was used by 7.8 million voters. The Consejo Nacional Electoral (CNE) also used SMS to tell with the 350,000 electoral witnesses where and when they should receive their training.

The text in number was widely promoted by TV, broadcast radio and newspapers. … The CNE is planing to keep the service operating permanently as a new comunication way in adition to their web site and freephone line.”

Source-  textually  Wireless Mobile Telecom

 

Huawei, ZTE Win in Africa on Phone-Equipment Prices

Ernest Ndukwe, head of Nigeria’s telephone regulator, had personal guides for shopping, sightseeing, and dining when he visited Hong Kong this month, all courtesy of Huawei Technologies Co.Huawei, China’s biggest telephone-equipment maker, and local rival ZTE Corp. may jointly control more than half the Nigerian mobile-phone equipment market by 2007, four years after they started operating in Africa’s most-populous nation, Ndukwe said in an interview. Their prices are 40 percent lower than companies such as Ericsson AB and Alcatel-Lucent charge in Nigeria, he said.

Huawei and ZTE, both based in Shenzhen, are courting officials such as Ndukwe as they focus on Africa, Asia, and Latin America to expand sales of Chinese technology. Developing nations will drive growth as the global cell-phone market adds more than a billion subscribers in the next two years, Motorola Inc. Chief Executive Ed Zander said this month.

“Doing business in China has taught ZTE and Huawei to focus on keeping their products simple and cheap,” Victor Yip, an analyst with UOB Kay Hian Securities in Hong Kong, said by phone. “People in developing markets don’t need fancy — they want something that works.”

Shares of ZTE rose 0.3 percent today in Hong Kong to HK$36.90 as of 10:26 a.m. local time. The stock has risen 41 percent this year, compared with a 28.5 percent gain for the Hang Seng Index. Trading of ZTE’s Shenzhen-listed shares was suspended after the company said it would issue about 48 million new shares to employees as part of an incentives program.

Doubled Sales

Privately held Huawei, which makes equipment used to build telephone networks, doubled sales in Nigeria last year to $600 million, Zeng Yong, general manager of the company’s unit in the African nation, said in a Dec. 7 interview. Huawei has about 400 employees in Nigeria, with offices in Abuja and Lagos.

“We’ve done really well there and I think we’re only going to do better,” said Zeng, who traveled to Hong Kong with Ndukwe and other Nigerian officials to attend the International Telecommunications Union conference.

Ndukwe is the chief executive of the Nigerian Communications Commission, which licenses mobile-phone carriers in the nation. Nigeria, Africa’s biggest cellular market after South Africa, may double subscribers to 50 million by 2010 from 25 million at the end of August, according to South Africa’s Rand Merchant Bank.

Huawei and ZTE can fuel growth of mobile-phone users in Nigeria by helping to lower costs so services are available to more of the population, Ndukwe said in the Dec. 7 interview in Hong Kong.

Alcatel-Lucent, Ericsson

“Emerging markets offer better opportunities than Europe or North America because there’s less competition and greater growth potential,” said Michael Meng, a Citigroup Inc. analyst in Hong Kong. “The Chinese are doing better in emerging markets because they’ve put much more focus there.”

Alcatel-Lucent’s business in Africa is conducted mostly through its Shanghai-based unit Alcatel-Lucent Shanghai Bell, Annie Chen, a spokeswoman for the subsidiary, said. The unit, in which Alcatel-Lucent holds 50 percent plus one share with Shanghai Belling Co. holding the remainder, was established in May 2002. Chen declined to comment on competition with Huawei and ZTE in Africa.

Lungi Tyali, a spokeswoman for Ericsson’s sub-Saharan Africa business, didn’t return calls seeking comment.

Won Contract

ZTE may more than double its number of employees in India next year to 2,000, Cao Qing, vice president of ZTE’s mobile-phone products unit, said in an interview last week in Hong Kong. India, the world’s fastest-growing mobile-phone market, added a record 6.7 million cell-phone users in October for a total of 136 million.

The Chinese phone-gear maker won a contract last month to supply equipment and handsets to Reliance Communications Ltd., India’s second-biggest mobile-phone operator, Cao said, declining to say how much the contract was worth.

ZTE won two $30 million contracts last month to provide phone equipment to the African nations of Lesotho and Ghana. In August, the Chinese company secured a $312 million contract to build a fiber-optic network in Venezuela.

Huawei said in September it won a $50 million contract to supply Compania Anonima Nacional Telefonos de Venezuela with equipment for a telecommunications network in Venezuela. The Chinese equipment maker has in the past six months won contracts in Columbia, Uruguay, Russia, Vietnam, Pakistan, Nigeria, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Morocco, Tajikistan and Saudi Arabia.

Giving Loans

China’s government has also helped by giving Nigeria and other developing countries loans to buy phone equipment, Ndukwe said. Chinese President Hu Jintao pledged $3 billion in loans to African nations over the next three years during a China-Africa summit held last month in Beijing.

“Huawei and ZTE need to expand overseas as Ericsson and other foreign companies pay more attention to China,” said Steven Liu, a DBS Vickers Securities analyst in Hong Kong.

China added 55.62 million mobile-phone users in the first 10 months of this year, taking its total to 449 million, according to government data.

While sales at Huawei and ZTE have been boosted by their focus on developing nations, profit margins are being affected by the companies’ low prices, Citigroup’s Meng said.

ZTE’s net income in the quarter to Sept. 30 fell by half from a year earlier, even as sales rose 15 percent. Huawei’s annual contract sales may grow 34 percent, compared with 46 percent in 2005, according to a company statement. Lower prices are contributing to the slowdown, Huawei Vice President Liu Jiangfeng said in June.

As emerging markets in Asia, Africa, and Latin America grow and add users, Huawei and ZTE will be able to sell products at higher prices, Meng said.

 

America Movil Raises Stakes In Brazil Gambit

America Movil, already the biggest wireless firm in Latin America, has emerged as the most likely buyer of Telecom Italia’s wireless phone business in Brazil.

The Mexican carrier has upped its bid for Telecom Italia’s TIM Participacoes (NYSE:TSU – News) to about $10 billion, according to media reports. Spain’s Telefonica Moviles (NYSE:TEF – News), another big player in Latin America, seems less interested in Telecom Italia’s Brazilian assets.

So far, no bids have surfaced from operators not currently in Latin America, such as Vodafone (NYSE:VOD – News) or Deutsche Telekom (NYSE:DT – News), analysts say.

America Movil has just one weak spot among Latin America’s markets: Brazil, the region’s biggest country.

Brazil’s largest wireless carrier is Telefonica Moviles, which operates Vivo. Telecom Italia’s TIM Participacoes comes next, offering wireless services in three of Brazil’s high-income states.

America Movil’s Claro is the third-biggest wireless firm in Brazil, which has about 185 million residents. America Movil would leapfrog Telefonica in Brazil by purchasing Telecom Italia’s assets.

Combining Claro’s 22 million customers with TIM Participacoes’ 24million would give America Movil nearly a 50% market share in Brazil.

“The acquisition would be very strategic for Claro,” said Luis Minoru, an analyst at market research firm Yankee Group.

In addition to making Claro No. 1 in Brazil and the only operator with nationwide coverage, the purchase would mean “one less competitor in the market,” he said.

America Movil has more than 113 million wireless subscribers across Latin America.

Outside of Brazil, where four wireless firms compete in most areas, America Movil and Telefonica Moviles hold a duopoly in most Latin American countries.

America Movil dominates in its home country of Mexico. It is No. 1 or No. 2 in Colombia, Ecuador, Argentina, Peru, Venezuela and Central America.

Telecom Italia faces a tough decision in whether to sell off the lucrative wireless business, analysts say. But shareholders have been clamoring for the company to reduce its $42 billion debt load.

Its Brazilian assets would be a nice prize for America Movil, says UBS analyst Stephen Graham. Taking out a big rival would likely boost its operating margins in Brazil, Graham says.

“America Movil may never replicate in Brazil its super-dominant position in Mexico, but being the largest in a three-player market would give America Movil a position of leadership that’s probably unassailable,” he said.

In the first nine months of 2006, America Movil’s Claro added 3.51 million customers. That’s down 6% from the 3.74 million it added in the same period a year earlier.

TIM Participacoes offers wireless services in three of Brazil’s high-income states. Its network coverage is good, analysts say. And it offers features popular with consumers, such as free roaming and long-distance calls charged at local rates.

Telefonica Moviles, while No. 1 in Brazil, has watched its market share slip below 30%, analyst say. Telefonica Movile’s Vivo also is in the middle of switching its network technology from the        CDMA wireless standard to the newer GSM. Minoru says getting customers to buy new GSM-ready phones could be tricky.

Telefonica Moviles and Portugal Telecom operate Vivo as a 50-50 joint venture. That makes a bid for Telecom Italia’s TIM Participacoes more difficult, analysts say.

But Portugal Telecom may reduce its stake, giving Telefonica Moviles more control.

Still, Telefonica Moviles may not be ready for another big acquisition.

It’s been just two years since Telefonica Moviles completed its buy of BellSouth’s (NYSE:BLS – News) wireless units in 10 countries in 2004 for $5.85 billion.

Telecom Italia’s sale of TIM Participacoes could be followed by other deals in Brazil, Minoru says.

“The consolidation in Brazil’s mobile sector isn’t finished,” he said.

   

 

Mobile Content Deals

Venezuelan company NetPeople seeks to expand its share of the Latin American mobile content market to 20% from its current 5% over the next four years, company president Orlando Carvallo told BNamericas???. Easier said than done, of course. NetPeople is seeking big-name brands to ally with (such as it has with Disney and Sony Pictures) for publicity campaigns, music, images and so on.
–Samsung has teamed with Twentieth Century Fox to offer mobile content based on the fantasy film Eragon. Samsung mobile phone users in Europe will be able to exclusively receive free mobile contents such as film trailers, screensavers and wallpapers before the premiere of the movie Eragon as they download from the website.”
–DY Mobile has signed a licensing deal with Universal Music Canada to sell realtones to customers on Canada’s 4 largest wireless networks. DY promotes the content in newspaper ads.
–Soundbuzz is expanding on its music offering, signing a deal with Coruscant Tec to offer images to its customers. Through this partnership Soundbuzz partners will have access to Coruscant’s entire databank of images including Man’s World magazine’s swimsuit collection, photos from Rave magazine and MF Hussain’s paintings.???
–Jamster is offering WeeMee Avatars. The avatars can be used as wallpapers, screensavers and visual caller ID images, but there is no news as to how much they’ll cost.

Source-  moconews     

Intercable to launch fixed line service

Venezuelan cable and internet provider Intercable plans to enter the fixed line telephony market on 15 November, writes BNamericas quoting local news agency MCB. The service will initially cover the Greater Caracas region, Valencia, Maracay, Barquisimeto and Maracaibo; Intercable plans to expand the service to twelve other cities in due course. Customers will be billed per-second for domestic or international calls, according to company president Eduardo Estigol, who said that local and domestic long-distance calls will be charged at the same rate.

Source-  telegeography  Wireless 

Motorola sees rapid Latam mobile growth for 3 years

 Latin America’s mobile phone market will continue rapid growth for at least three years until 75 percent of people in the region own a cellphone, U.S. mobile-maker Motorola (NYSE:MOT – news) said Wednesday.

Gustavo Wrobel, Motorola’s Communications Director for Mobile Devices, quoted industry data showing cellphone penetration would rise to 50 percent by the end of 2006, up from 43 percent in 2005.

“For the next three years the region is going to continue growing and is going to reach levels similar to other parts of the world,” the official from the world’s second biggest mobile phone maker told Reuters by telephone.

“Perhaps three years from here, once the market has matured, we are going to enter a new phase in which growth is going to be tempered, but that will be when three out of four Latin Americans will definitely have a phone.”

Wrobel said Motorola was the market-leader in Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, Peru and Venezuela. Its principal rival in Latin America is Finland’s        Nokia (NOK1V.HE).

Source-  news.yahoo   

FASTTAKES: Huawei, Bharti, Wal-Mart, IPMobile

Huawei Technologies wins a network contract worth of more than $50 million, with CANTV, a provider of telecommunications services in

Venezuela
. Under the contract, Huawei will help CANTV to transfer its traditional analog network to the next generation network.

India
‘s Bharti Global secures a GSM and 3G license in the
UK
island
of Jersey, through a subsidiary company, Jersey Telenet. The company said it plans to invest $37.7 million in setting up a network that is expected to be operational in October.

Wal-Mart Stores reports that it is not trying to dissuade movie studios from working with other forms of distribution, such as Apple’s iTunes download service. The New York Post last week reported that the world’s largest retailer has warned Hollywood it may retaliate against studios for selling movies on iTunes, a move that could hurt Wal-Mart’s DVD sales.

IPMobile finalizes an agreement with

Japan
‘s Oki Electric Industries in providing base station infrastructure for their mobile broadband wireless service in
Japan
. Oki will support IPMobile in building a full TD-CDMA network, including the base stations, the IP core network and the central control facilities.

Source- http://www.telecomasia.net/article.php?type=article&id_article=1823

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Venezuelan telecoms revenue rises to VEB 3.3 bln in Q2

The Venezuelan telecoms industry had VEB 3.3 billion revenue in Q2 2006, up 22.3 percent vs the year-earlier period, according to preliminary figures from Conatel. Telecoms industry investment was VEB 443 million, up 46.7 percent. The growth was helped by the mobile phone service, which had 15.8 million lines, up 61 percent. There are around 58 mobile lines per 100 residents. The number of text messages sent was 6.14 billion, up 75.3 percent, for an average of 4.63 messages per person per day. There were 151,765 new fixed lines added in Q2 for a total of 3.85 million subscribers. The fixed-line subscriber base rose 10.3 percent vs Q2 2005. Venezuela ended Q2 with 151,161 public phones, up 13 percent vs Q2 2005. The number of internet subscribers was 703,930, up 33 percent. The number of broadband subscribers rose 62.3 percent. The number of subscription-TV customers was 1.16 million at end-Q2, up 12.7 percent vs Q2 2005. Around 18 people in 100 have subscription TV.

Source- http://www.telecompaper.com

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