Saturday, June 25, 2011
MPJC: no visionaries
Ericsson: File-sharing is a symptom of a problem, rather than a problem in itself
ISPs are being forced to act as digital security agents on behalf of economic rights holders by listening in, screening, surveying and filtering the exchange of information between consumers. Such strict enforcement further damages the prospects of legal digital alternatives by introducing the principle of innovation by permission. It also carries unwelcome echoes of the old Eastern-bloc surveillance societies that modern Europe has decisively rejected.File-sharing is a symptom of a problem, rather than a problem in itself. This problem is the inadequate availability of legal, timely, competitively priced and wide-ranging choices of affordable digital-content offerings. Consumers also expect to be able to make decisions freely regarding when and how to consume the content of their choice. By clinging to outdated business methods such as windowing and territoriality, economic-rights holders are in fact creating the consumer behavior against which they so violently protest.How can we, as good Europeans, accept this state of affairs? The success of our European project is founded upon freedom of movement – for persons, goods, services and capital. Why should digital content be an exception? How can policymakers continue to endorse the vested interests of economicrights holders at the expense of the promises of the single market and our fundamental freedoms?Ericsson is calling for full consumer access to legal, timely, competitively priced and wide-ranging compelling content offerings, and a free choice of when, where and how this legal digital content can be consumed. We call for an end to regulatory barriers and deliberate non-availability through windowing and territoriality. We call – a full 60 years after the Treaty of Paris – for a digital single market that not only meets the requirements of today’s and future European consumers, but also the requirements of European history.
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Can you discuss internet freedom with morons and barbarians?
- The Radio Kamer Filharmonie will disappear. A few years back, the national radio 0rchestra infrastructure was severely cut back and now it will happen all over again. We have an internationally acclaimed set of orchestras (Radio Filharmonisch, Radio Kamer, Metropole) and a unique choir (Groot Omroep Koor).
- All institutions will receive less state subsidy and will need to be more commercial to find new income sources. A US model around patrons paying big bucks is seen a role model for our country.
"I feel defeated and dispirited. It is as if all if did during the last 50 years was without value. I am bewildered by the resentment against the arts. It's one big frontal assault. As if you are sitting at the table and somebody gets up to slap you in the face. That makes it so hard to formulate a response."
Friday, June 17, 2011
Are operators going to hit a wall?
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Operator points of view on net neutrality
- Tellabs: 'End of profit' (study, 2011), assuming that flat fees are kept in place.
- Ericsson: 'Busting the myth of the scissor effect' (Business Review #2 2010).
- NSN: '... it is possible to provide up to 5 GB of data per month for every existing voice subscriber by using HSPA and LTE radios in existing sites. (...) Monthly network capex + opex can be kept below 3 EUR per subscriber ...' (Mobile broadband with HSPA and LTE, 2010)
3-D and mobile data offloading can use some 'standardisation'
- Active glasses; a standard for this version is under development at Panasonic and XpanD.
- Passive glasses: Philips has a set.
- Glasses-free 3-D: Nissho Electronics and Dimenco have launched a set in Japan.
- WiFi: either free from restaurants/hotels; free for mobile and/or broadband subs; for-pay (e.g. Boing); free/shared (FON).
- Femtocells, picocells.
- Rely on 4G and the right spectrum (Real Wireless for Ofcom: 230-450% efficiency gain; TeliaSonera at Investor Day: 8x more efficient). LTE-Advanced is poised to offer speeds up to 1 Gb/s.
- All new wireless architectures from Alcatel-Lucent (lightRadio), Ericsson (Antenna Integrated Radio), NSN (Liquid Radio).
- TD-LTE to roll out a cheap data network.
- Network sharing, possibly even with a wholesale-only partner (such as LightSquared in the US, or perhaps UK Broadband in the UK).
Thursday, June 09, 2011
France Telecom offers little to support growth forecasts
Some elements of the strategy already announced:
- Focus on emerging markets, where revenues should double within three years (18 June 2010);
- Further cooperation with Deutsche Telekom on network sharing, Wi-Fi roaming, M2M, R&D and joint procurement (11 February 2011); sharing agreements are already in place in Austria and Poland, as well as the joint venture Everything Everywhere in UK; the procurement project has also started (18 April 2011);
- Working towards network sharing in Austria, Romania en Slovakia (27 April 2011); in Belgium (Base) and Spain (Vodafone) it’s already working with partners;
- A review of assets for possible sale, outside France, Poland and Spain (3 May 2011).
'Adapt' and 'Conquer'
The new plans add to the above. The period 2011-2015 is split in two phases:
- 2011-2013: the ‘Adaptation Phase’. The company will invest and expand in new markets, such as apps. The company will also be strengthened. Sales growth is expected at an average 0.6 percent per year (CAGR), and EBITDA is estimated at a cumulative EUR 45 billion. Capex will total EUR 18.5 billion. Operating cash flow, defined by FT as EBITDA minus capex, is put at EUR 27 billion. Capex will be 12.6 percent of revenues, excluding FTTH in France, with a peak of 14 percent in 2012.
- 2014-2015: the ‘Conquest Phase’. A return to sustainable growth, with a revenue CAGR of 2.7 percent and EBITDA CAGR of 3.4 percent. Cumulatieve capex is forecast at EUR 11 billion, and operating cash flow will grow at a CAGR of 9 percent. Capex will drop to 10 percent of revenues.
The company also targets cost savings from network sharing and IT. These are expected to reach EUR 3 billion per year by 2015. For the FTTH plans in France, the company will invest as earlier announced EUR 2 billion. France Telecom will also sell minority stakes in companies where it has no operational control, such as in Austria (35 percent in Orange Austria) and Portugal (20 percent in Sonaecom). The dividend was set at EUR 1.40 per share for 2011 and 2012.
A look back, and forward
First we compare the targets to the company’s recent results (2009, 2010 ) and the market expectations to 2015 (see table).
EUR bln | 2009A | 2010A | 2011E | 2012E | 2013E | 2014E | 2015E |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sales | 46.13 | 45.50 | 45.79 | 45.43 | 45.36 | 44.83 | 44.94 |
EBITDA | 16.28 | 15.64 | 15.27 | 15.05 | 14.95 | 14.77 | 14.71 |
Capex | 5.32 | 5.52 | 6.12 | 5.84 | 5.70 | 5.63 | 5.44 |
We see that the targets for the first phase are in line with market expectations, although capex will probably be higher than is currently expected. However, the aim to accelerate growth in the second phase is not in line with current market estimates, which predict a continued erosion in results. Estimates for 2014 and 2015 should be taken with a grain of salt, as most analysts do not provide estimates beyond 2-3 years. The coming days will show whether the market was impressed by the plans and the presentation from CEO Stephane Richard. If so, the estimates should move up.
France: difficult market
The first reaction from investors was slightly negative, with a small drop in the share price. This reflects the fact that the targets for 2014 and 2015 are a bit of a shot in the dark. Furthermore, France (in 2010 good for 49% of sales and 59% of EBITDA) is no easy market:
- A fourth mobile operator (Iliad/Free) will enter the market in 2012.
- A bit of a half-hearted FTTH strategy, where the target of 10 million homes passed in 2015 (see our commentary ‘If KPN wants to match the French FTTH plans, it should buy out Reggefiber’) is difficult to square with the capex budget of just EUR 2 billion. Furthermore, there is significant competition in FTTH, from Iliad/Free, Numericable, SFR and numerous local initiatives.
- Possibilities à la KPN to cut jobs are more limited, due to the public status of many of the 170,000 employees. FT did recently estimate that in the period to 2020, around 30,400 employees should be eligible for retirement.
Conclusion
At the moment it’s not totally clear what FT expects to support the growth targets for after 2013, apart from economic recovery and an easier comparison (the big cuts in MTA end in 2012 and Free Mobile is expected to start in early 2012). In addition to acquisitions, investments from the preceding years should make a contribution, but then it’s curious that the investment level (capex as a percentage of sales) for the period from 2014 is projected to quickly drop back to 10 percent. This puts growth in the period after 2015 at risk. In short, after years of contraction through both competition and regulation, the question for France Telecom and the telecom sector general is can it return to the status of growth sector? Or do we need to settle for the low growth seen in the utilities sector?
This post originally was published here on May 31, 2011 as a translation of this Background article (subscription required)
Wednesday, June 08, 2011
Consumer clouds and lockers: implications for operators
- Internet-based computing, remote computing
- Often subscription-based or free
- On demand
- Managed by third-party
- Optional: automatic updates/back-ups, synchronisation across devices
- Apple: iCloud, iTunes, iPhone, iPod, iPad.
- Google: Android, Chrome, Chrome OS, Chromebook, Google Music, Gmail, Google Docs, Google Apps, YouTube, Picasa, Google Fiber, cloud connect for Microsoft Office.
- Microsoft: Office 365, Lync, SkyDrive, Azure.
- Amazon: Cloud Drive, Cloud Player, Kindle, Amazon Web Services.
- Yahoo!: Yahoo! Mail, Flickr.
- Any file: Amazon Cloud Drive, Box.net
- Music: Spotify, Google Music (beta), Apple iCloud
- Photos: Flickr
- Video: Netflix, YouTube, Uitzendinggemist, BBC iPlayer, UltraViolet
- Presentations: SlideShare, SlideRocket
- Social networking: Facebook, LinkedIn, Hyves
- OS (turn iPad or Chromebook into fully-fledged computer): Chrome OS
- Office: Microsoft Office 365, Google Docs/Apps, Zoho
- Individual file storage (for sharing): RapidShare, MegaUpload, zShare
- Back-up, remote access: Dropbox, Mozy, Carbonite
- NTT Com: Dimension Data, Frontline Systems
- Verizon: Terremark
- CenturyLink: Savvis
- Windstream: Hosted Solutions
- TDS: Visi
- Cincinatti Bell: CyrusOne
- Time Warner Cable: NaviSite
- Telefonica: Acens Technologies
- Netflix is a big AWS (Amazon) customer for its Watch Instantly streaming service.
- KPN launches SME Workspace: software and services from KPN CyberCenters at 40 EUR/employee/month (May 31 2011).
- Telstra to invest AUD 800m over 5 years; 1 new datacenter, modernising existing, building new apps and a management portal (June 16 2011).
- Salesforce.com: Force.com
- VMware: Cloud Foundry
- Microsoft: Azure
- Amazon: BeanStalk
- Google: App Engine
- As the computer/files/hard disks are cut out of the ecosystem and the cloud replaces them: a. connectivity becomes more important, and b. the computer ecosystem (Microsoft, Intel) stands to lose.
- Syncing/back-ups/updates will be done over WiFi, so wireless will not be burdened (for now). WiFi becomes even more important. Ultimately, WiFi implies fiber.
- Other network elements (CDN's, data centers, servers) may also become more important. However, Apple (and Google) are using their own private networks.
- Operators have control over the last mile, but Apple (and Google) may control all the other network elements. Next battlegrounds: WiFi, FTTH (as in Google Fiber).
- Amazon Web Services provides cloud services to smaller players.
- Hosting, co-location, housing.
- Enormous lock-in for Apple (and Google) will work in their favour. They control the subscriber's data. Will operators have an answer and provide these services: put all your data in our cloud, with automatic back-up and syncing?
- Apple's system is closed: plays on iOS devices only.
- Apple and Google are going OTT, while operators have their own managed and secure infrastructure.
- Is email (Hotmail, Yahoo! Mail, Gmail) the basis of developing a cloud strategy?
- Do cloud-based players such as Facebook, Dropbox, Zoho, Flickr, SlideRocket, Netflix, Evernote have a future?
- Ericsson is in a way the biggest operator in the world, through its managed services. They can be a partner for telcos, which can then focus on sales & marketing.
- Is UltraViolet still relevant? It's open, runs anywhere.
- Cloud negatives: security (privacy), reliability (access), latency. Also: digital media fragmentation across multiple clouds and devices.
- Cloud positives: better functionality and flexibility, faster and automatic updates (everything as a service), cost savings (lower capex/opex), shift from capex (hardware) to opex (subscription).
- Lower cost (SaaS, Slim PC)
- Buy once, play anywhere (streaming)
- Sync across devices
- Share among family members
- Infrastructure? Last mile (fixed and wireless) is too expensive to replicate
- Cloud computing? Local and managed datacenters offer better security.
- Services, sales & marketing? OTT players are building direct-to-consumer relationships, with credit card billing.
- Telcos are squeezed: competition, regulation, device manufacturers, OTT players.
- iOS devices only.
- No TV/video.
- WiFi only.
- Video calls (FaceTime) limited to on-net over WiFi.
Tuesday, June 07, 2011
Apple iCloud: perfect for laundering all your 'acquired' music
- iCloud: auto sync over WiFi to all devices (up to 10); scan & match to convert all your tracks to AAC; photo stream to push 1,000 most recent photos to each device; daily back-up over WiFi; 5 GB free storage for mail, docs, back-up.
- iOS 5: iMessage for free on-net SMS/MMS among iOS users; Twitter integration.
- 200m iOS devices sold so far, of which 25m iPads.
- 54m active Mac users.
- App Store holds 425k apps, of which 90k for iPad only; 14bn apps have been downloaded.
- iBookstore holds 200k titles; 130m iBooks have been downloaded.
- iTunes Store: 225m accounts, 15bn tracks were downloaded.
- Game Center: 50m users.
- Bad news for SMS/MMS and possibly for BlackBerry/Ping. However, Apple is still a top-end brand, limiting its network effect. But the lock-in appears to be vast.
- Cloud computing, data centers and connectivity increasingly important; WiFi in particular.
- Same for developers. Who are the champions? Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, ...
- Sacrificing: the Mac computer; no longer needed for syncing.
- There seem to be no limits to their developing powers. Each is building its own version of the internet. And if Google should ever launch a bank, they would be building their own version of ... the economy.
- Conspicuously missing so far: streaming media, broadcast/video and VoIP.
- Scan & match appears to be a laundering tool for all so far cobbled together music from various sources. Not sure if the music majors are involved. Is there a revenue sharing deal? Or have they been as clever as one can expect, taking just $150m?
Friday, June 03, 2011
Groupon IPO (2): $30bn seems to be more like 10 Groupons
- 11Q1: revenue $645m, of which $298m in North-America.
- In 09Q2, Groupon's revenue (North-America only) came down to $660,000 per market. We really want the 'same store sales' to filter out the effect of acquisitions. We take the revenue per North-American market as a proxy. In 11Q1, this number was $1.70m.
- This works out to be an annual growth rate of 72 percent. Still quite high, but not as astronomical as the total revenue growth numbers. We assume that this drops off quickly to more normal levels, dus to competition and market saturisation.
Thursday, June 02, 2011
Groupon IPO: not all that rosy beneath the extreme growth rates

Groupon is a local e-commerce marketplace that connects merchants to consumers by offering goods and services at a discount. Traditionally, local merchants have tried to reach consumers and generate sales through a variety of methods, including the yellow pages, direct mail, newspaper, radio, television and online advertisements, promotions and the occasional guy dancing on a street corner in a gorilla suit. By bringing the brick and mortar world of local commerce onto the internet, Groupon is creating a new way for local merchants to attract customers and sell goods and services. We provide consumers with savings and help them discover what to do, eat, see and buy in the places where they live and work.We started Groupon in November 2008 and believe the growth of our business demonstrates the power of our solution and the size of our market opportunity:
- •
- We increased our revenue from $3.3 million in the second quarter of 2009 to $644.7 million in the first quarter of 2011.
- •
- We expanded from five North American markets as of June 30, 2009 to 175 North American markets and 43 countries as of March 31, 2011.
- •
- We increased our subscriber base from 152,203 as of June 30, 2009 to 83.1 million as of March 31, 2011.
- •
- We increased the number of merchants featured in our marketplace from 212 in the second quarter of 2009 to 56,781 in the first quarter of 2011.
- •
- We sold 116,231 Groupons in the second quarter of 2009 compared to 28.1 million Groupons in the first quarter of 2011.
- •
- We grew from 37 employees as of June 30, 2009 to 7,107 employees as of March 31, 2011.
Each day we email our subscribers discounted offers for goods and services that are targeted by location and personal preferences. Consumers also access our deals directly through our websites and mobile applications. A typical deal might offer a $20 Groupon that can be redeemed for $40 in value at a restaurant, spa, yoga studio, car wash or other local merchant. Customers purchase Groupons from us and redeem them with our merchants. Our revenue is the purchase price paid by the customer for the Groupon. Our gross profit is the amount of revenue we retain after paying an agreed upon percentage of the purchase price to the featured merchant.
Groupon primarily addresses the worldwide local commerce markets in the leisure, recreation, foodservice and retail sectors. According to Euromonitor, the leisure, recreation and foodservice market is expected to be $1.4 trillion in the U.S. and $5.3 trillion internationally in 2011. The retail market is expected to be $2.9 trillion in the U.S. and $12.2 trillion internationally in 2011. We believe a substantial portion of these expenditures on leisure, recreation, foodservice and retail will be spent with local merchants. Groupon also addresses the online advertising market serving these merchants. The size of the U.S. online advertising market is estimated to be $51.9 billion in 2011, of which $16.1 billion is estimated to be spent by local merchants according to Borrell Associates. The size of the global online advertising market is estimated to be approximately $79 billion in 2011, according to IDC.
- Groupon grows mainly by acquisition (but it is unclear how much organic growth is). What we really need is a 'same stores sales' number.
- The entry barrier is very low. Loads of competition is coming, from a wide range of companies: LivingSocial, DailyCandy (Comcast), Woot.com (Amazon), Thrillist, ChoozOn, Google Offers, Facebook Deals, Spreets (Yahoo! in Australia), even AT&T/YP.com and lots of newspapers such as Treat Me in New Zealand and Times Limited from the NYT.
- Growth by acquisition is hard to value. We have done a similar thing for Skype (for which Microsoft ended up paying much more than we anticipated) and LinkedIn (which was sharply undervalued at its IPO). For Groupon, we do not look at R&D (there is none), but marketing as an essential source of growth.
- In 11Q1, revenues were up 14x, gross result 14x, earnings after marketing 27x.
- Gross margin appears to be roughly stabilising at the 40-45% level. The earnings-after-marketing margin is not yet stabilising.
- In 11Q1, operating cash flow was up 39% and free cash flow was down 42% (possibly as a result of buying office space?). So, cash flow growth is not nearly keeping up with topline growth.
- In 11Q1, subscribers were up 24x, customers 18x, merchants 20x, groupons sold 16x.
- The activity rate (customers as a percentage of subscribers) seems to be sort of stabilising at around 20%. The number of groupons per customer is down to 1.78 from 2.01 last year. The number of groupons per merchant is also down, from 606 to 495.
- Conclusion #1: subscribers are growing faster than revenues, so are becoming less valuable.
- Conclusion #2: buying groupons per customer is down, so either competition is kicking in or the excitement of buying is wearing off.
- Conclusion #3: selling groupons per merchant is down, so either Groupon is adding less interesting (and interested) merchants, or they are less willing to offer their wares at steep discounts.
- Conclusion #4: operating cash flow as a percentage of revenues is not as impressive as one might expect; there was a peak level of 27% in 10Q1, but all of 2010 was just 10%. It is early days, but the business doesn't appear to be that profitable.