Broadband blues

slow broadband

AT&T and Verizon may have provided early  evidence that an economic slump is having a knock-on effect on the telecoms sector. Despite posting pretty stellar results, on the whole, both reported weaker broadband growth than expected. AT&T saw a rise in access line losses during December, and a fall in the rate of broadband adoption. And Verizon, which announced its quarterly results today, witnessed virtually no DSL growth at all, according to bankers at JP Morgan.

 

As a household service, broadband was always going to be vulnerable to a slowdown in the housing market. Luckily for AT&T, only 18% of revenues come from consumer wireline, and other parts of its business seem to be holding up well, including wireless. It seems perfectly reasonable to expect continued growth here. Cell phones have fast become a necessity in developed and emerging markets. The economic setback will probably just accelerate the trend of fixed-mobile substitution, whereby customers ditch their fixed-line phones to save money and rely even more on their mobiles.

 

It’s all bad news for companies dependent on broadband growth for their long-term prosperity. Operators without a wireless business look very exposed in the current climate.

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