2008 New Zealand - Telecoms Overview and Analysis


Publication Overview

For those needing detailed overviews, statistics and forecasts, as well as objective analysis on all aspects of the New Zealand telecoms industry, this report provides essential reading and gives in-depth information on:



  • An overall market overview, statistics and forecast;

  • Key players in the market;

  • Telecommunications infrastructure;

  • Regulatory developments;

  • Fixed network voice and VoIP markets.


 




Executive Summary

BuddeComm’s 2008 New Zealand - Telecoms - Overview and Analysis publication provides a detailed overview, including statistics, forecasts and analysis, of the regulatory, infrastructure, fixed network voice and VoIP sectors of the New Zealand telecommunications market, as well as an overview of the key market players.

The telecoms industry in New Zealand has undergone significant changes over the last year. While the results of these changes will not have a significant impact on the market in the short term, they will profoundly alter the telecoms market over the next five years. Until late 2007, it was envisaged that the most important and positive development was the change in attitude of the incumbent from one that has historically provided resistance to regulatory change, to one that is prepared to work together with the industry in a more mutually beneficial way. Unfortunately the industry got a rude awakening in late 2007 when Telecom launched its cabinetisation program, without a clear transition plan for the rest of the industry.

The total telecoms market in New Zealand grew by 1.1% in the 12 months to June 2007 to $7.54 billion. BuddeComm predicts that the total New Zealand telco market will grow around 0.9% in 2007/08 and 2.8% in 2008/09. Telecom maintains a stranglehold on the local access market in fixed-line voice and broadband.

The bundling of voice, data and video services (triple play) and mobile services (quadruple play) are likely to develop on a more large scale fashion in New Zealand in 2008 and 2009. We expect the local access voice market to fall further over the next few years, as phone call prices and volumes continue to drop and more people give up their traditional home phone line and move to alternative access networks such as mobile and VoIP as well as products based on data and IP-based solutions.

Over time, the new environment will open up lots of new opportunities for everybody involved. These include the value-added infrastructure opportunities such as data centres, content hosting, network management, etc. But equally a range of innovative customer services can be built on the new wholesale products and perhaps more importantly open networks will create a great new environment for digital media, e-health, tele-education and smart grid applications in which there will now be much wider scope for a variety of organisations to participate.

In the meantime however, the outlook for competition is bleak. There still are no attractive wholesale products and prices here are set to increase. Vodafone/ihug is behaving as yet another monopolist and TelstraClear has retracted to the Trans Tasman and corporate market, showing very little industry leadership.

Annual change of total telecom market revenue by service - 2005 - 2009

Revenue source 2005 2006 2007 2008 (e) 2009 (e)
Voice 1.1% -1.8% -2.0% -4.0% -3.1%
Data, Internet & value added services 7.4% 8.2% 4.2% 2.5% 8.0%
Mobile 13.5% 8.6% 0.4% 3.2% 2.9%
Pay TV 10.9% 12.3% 12.6% 10.0% 9.0%
Other 2.8% 3.2% 1.6% 1.4% 6.7%
Total market 5.9% 4.1% 1.1% 0.9% 2.8%
(Source: BuddeComm based on industry data)

Key highlights - Key players in the market

  • Telecom will undergo a period of transformation over the next one to two years, as it transitions to its NGN and makes the necessary adjustments required to implement Operational Separation. We therefore forecast negative revenue growth of around 1% in 2007/08.
  • However, with the very low level of any real competition the company will be able to maintain its position in the market with relative high margins.
  • Without a new coherent overall strategy in place, TelstraClear has drifted into a very dangerous position. The company must change its business model and move further and deeper into marketing and sales, utilizing the wholesale products that will increasingly become available.
  • Vodafone has introduced a triple-play fixed voice, mobile and Internet service to the market, as well as putting into place its Fixed-to-Mobile Convergence strategy. This is great for consumers but is undermining competition.
  • Kordia’s purchase of Orcon, gives Orcon the opportunity to target the small business segment with higher-end Internet, wireless access, and voice services. Orcon will also have opportunities to move into new areas such as IPTV, while Kordia now has the opportunity to leverage a retail-focused ISP.
  • CallPlus is considering both WiMAX and ULL as technologies that can meet its requirements. This will enable it to intersperse MSANs/DSLAMs with WiMAX based on the economics in particular areas, thus building independent infrastructure.
  • Maxnet anticipates an increased range of wholesale DSL access options and better pricing from 2008 onwards, and will continue to roll out new Telecom wholesale services as they become available.

Telecommunications infrastructure

  • The progressive introduction of ADSL2+ broadband will eventually enable the delivery of new services on top of Telecom’s broadband infrastructure. Services delivered, by the company itself, over its NGN in 2008 should include VoIP, video calling, converged fixed/mobile offerings, Interactive television and VoD. This faster access will also be critical for the growth of digital media services.
  • However it will take a couple of years for these services to become widespread and it will not be until 2012 that Telecom’s NGN network will have been completed.
  • For the past few years the industry has seen a significant rise in the use of wireless technologies in competition to the more traditional copper and fibre optic-based solutions. A number of niche fibre optic networks have also been established, but their overall impact has been negligible.

Regulatory

  • The New Zealand Government confirmed that it was going ahead with its plan on the Operational Separation; however the implementation depends far too much on Telecom’s voluntary cooperation.
  • The government also issued draft determinations on price and non-price terms governing Telecom New Zealand’s provision of ULL and co-location services. Despite this there is still a lack of good wholesale products and prices are going up.
  • The government’s decision to proceed with the operational separation of Telecom and to introduce new services such as LLU, naked DSL, and a wider range of regulated wholesale services, are scheduled to begin to be introduced into the New Zealand market by the beginning of 2008; however, Telecom’s cabinetisation plan could make rollout of some of these services difficult.
  • The Commerce Commission seems set to require new entrants to build out their networks to 80% of the population within five years in return for the right to roam, as it saw no business case for networks that didn’t provide national coverage. We doubt if this is going to happen.

Fixed network voice and VoIP markets

  • The local access market in New Zealand dropped by 2% in 2006/07; BuddeComm predicts that it will drop by another 4% in 2007/08.
  • This trend is anticipated as phone call prices and volumes continue to drop and more people give up their traditional home phone line and move to alternative access networks such as mobile and VoIP as well as products based on data and IP-based solutions.
  • Mobile calls still have not made any serious impact on the fixed call markets, as mobile charges are amongst the highest in the world.
  • Growth in consumer VoIP services will gradually impact traditional fixed-line services in New Zealand over the next five years as well as fixed-to-mobile revenues.
  • The traditional landline will gradually disappear as the analogue based PSTN will be fully decommissioned by 2012, as Telecom by that time should have completed the rollout of its NGN.
  • Telecom’s cabinetisation announcement will see a $1.5 billion investment in fibre network, replacing 2,000 local exchanges.


Table of Contents

1.MARKET OVERVIEW
1.1Key highlights
1.1.1Market overview and analysis
1.1.2Key players in the market
1.2Telecommunications infrastructure
1.2.1Market overview
1.2.2Telecom’s Next Generation Network (NGN)
1.3Regulatory developments
1.3.1Operational separation of Telecom
1.3.2Local Loop Unbundling
1.3.3Telecom’s Transition plan
1.3.4Mobile
1.4Fixed network voice
1.5Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
2.MARKET AND INDUSTRY ANALYSIS
2.1The dawn of a new era
2.2Progress at the expense of competition – November 2007
2.2.1Shortsighted industry
2.2.2Telecom fibre plans are no surprise
2.2.3No progress in wholesale
2.2.4Broadband prices double that of other countries
2.2.5New endless regulatory debates?
2.3The industry will have to wait a bit longer
2.4Infrastructure analysis
2.4.1National infrastructure plan is essential
2.4.2e-health and environmental issues
2.4.3Savings can pay for infrastructure
2.4.4Technology issues
2.4.5Fibre networks and NGNs
2.5Telecom New Zealand – analysis
2.5.1A company in transition
2.5.2New opportunities in value-added infrastructure services
2.5.3Sole national infrastructure company
2.6TelstraClear – analysis
2.6.1Crunch year for the challenger
2.6.22007 saw a dangerous slide in performance
2.6.3New Zealand does need a strong competitor
2.6.4More pain before gain
2.6.5Opportunities in IT-based services
3.KEY STATISTICS
4.MAJOR PLAYERS
4.1Telecom Corporation of New Zealand
4.2Telstraclear Ltd
4.3Vodafone New Zealand Ltd
4.4ihug
4.4.1Company ownership, subsidiaries
4.4.2Company strategy
4.4.3Subscribers statistics and financial results – 2006
4.4.4The ihug network
4.5Kordia
4.5.1Overview
4.5.2The Kordia network
4.5.3Wireless broadband
4.5.4Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB)
4.5.5Video-over-IP broadcasting
4.5.6Overseas developments
4.5.7Financial results – 2007
4.5.8Strategic overview – late 2007
4.5.9Company analysis – Kordia, is the sleeping giant waking up?
4.6CallPlus
4.6.1Overview
4.6.2Access strategy
4.6.3Company background
4.7Compass Communications
4.7.1Overview
4.8M2 Telecommunications
4.9Southern Cross Cable Network
4.9.1Network overview
4.10WorldxChange Communications
4.10.1Overview
4.10.2Network
5.REVENUE AND FORECASTS
5.1Revenue statistics by major providers
5.1.1Overall market
5.1.2Telecom and TelstraClear
5.2Revenue statistics by market segment
5.2.1Overall market
5.2.2Mobile
5.2.3Data, ISP and broadband
5.2.4Local access and calling
5.3Revenue forecasts 2005 - 2015
5.3.1Introduction
5.3.2By markets
5.3.3By-products
5.3.4By industry
5.3.5Where to go from here?
6.FIXED NETWORK VOICE MARKET
6.1Local access and fixed voice market overview
6.1.1Telecom continues to dominate a declining local access market
6.1.2Smaller players gaining only limited traction
6.1.3Market trends moving into 2008 and 2009
6.2Local access and calling revenues
6.2.1Market revenues
6.3Local access and calling statistics
6.3.1Current – Telecom only
6.4Market surveys
6.4.1Fixed-line voice pricing survey
7.VOIP MARKET
7.1Where is the VoIP market heading?
7.1.1Global trends
7.1.2Residential VoIP adoption will be slow and protracted
7.2Local VoIP market developments
7.2.1Residential sector
7.2.2Business sector
7.3Corporate IP Telephony market surveys – 2006
7.3.1IP telephony adoption in the business sector
7.3.2PBX market
7.4Advantages of implementing VoIP systems
7.5Emerging VoIP applications
7.5.1Click to call
7.5.2VoIP peering
7.5.3VoIP mobiles
7.6Global VoIP surveys
7.6.1Australian businesses not enthusiastically embracing VoIP – June 2007
7.6.2VoIP will not be effective without upgraded broadband
7.6.3VoIP quality deteriorating, but who cares? We do!
8.INFRASTRUCTURE
8.1Telecommunications infrastructure in New Zealand
8.1.1Market overview
8.1.2Market analysis
8.2Network access technologies
8.2.1Copper cables
8.2.2Fibre networks
8.2.3New Zealand institute argues for national fibre network rollout
8.2.4Local metropolitan fibre network initiatives
8.2.5Wireless
8.3Local council initiatives
8.3.1Auckland City Council – broadband strategy
8.3.2Proposed fibre rollout in Wellington
8.4Internet peering
8.4.1What is Internet peering?
8.4.2Disadvantages in not peering
8.4.3Internet Peering Exchanges in New Zealand
8.4.4Telecom NZ announces plans to take local peering to market
8.4.5Dark fibre
8.5Government initiatives
8.5.1Government targets fast fibre rollouts for 15 towns
8.5.2Government’s high-speed advance network
8.6Telecom’s network
8.6.1National network
8.6.2Fibre network
8.6.3Data network
8.6.4Next Generation Network (NGN)
8.6.5Rural and intra-island networks
8.6.6International connections
8.6.7AAPT’s Australian network
8.7Telstraclear’s network
8.7.1Network overview
8.7.2Fibre network update – early 2007
8.7.3NGN platform solution rollout
8.8Broadband over Powerlines (BPL)
8.8.1Transpower to deploy nationwide wide IP network – May 2007
9.REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT
9.1Local Loop Unbundling (LLU) and Unbundled Bitstream Service (UBS) overview
9.1.1LLU versus UBS
9.1.2Unbundled Bitstream Access (UBA)
9.1.3Wholesale bitstream services
9.2LLU and UBS market developments
9.2.1Government reforms
9.2.2Other market developments – 2006
9.3Interconnection
9.3.1Market developments – 2006
9.4Telecommunications Service Obligations (Kiwi Share)
9.4.1Background
9.4.2Market developments – 2007
9.4.3Market Analysis – 2007
9.4.4Market developments – 2006
9.5Telecommunications Act
9.5.1Framework of the Telecommunications Act
9.5.2The Commerce Commission
9.5.3Standards New Zealand and the Telecommunications Carriers Forum
9.6Government reforms on operational separation of Telecom – 2007
9.6.1Government releases details of operational separation of Telecom
9.6.2Government formerly announces operational separational split plan
9.6.3Telecom’s reaction to government’s operational separation announcement
9.7Background on operational separation policy reforms – 2006 - 2007
9.7.1Overview of new government reforms
9.7.2Telecom to separate wholesale and retail divisions
9.7.3New Zealand moves towards operational separation of Telecom
9.7.4New Zealand parliament passes the telecom reforms
9.7.5Telecom proposes a transitional operational separation model
9.7.6Telecom opts for structural separation – April 2007
9.7.7Government to consider possibility of structural separation – July 2007
9.8Analysis of the reforms on operational separation
9.8.1Structural changes are proceeding – September 2007
9.9Other market developments related to the Telecommunications Act – 2006
9.9.1New Bill brought forward regarding amendment to Telecommunications Act
9.9.2Telecom proposes establishment of industry working parties
9.9.3New bill for broadband access (LLU)
9.10Extension of period of regulation of telecommunication services
9.10.1Preliminary findings from Commerce Commission – 2005
9.10.2Update – November 2005
9.10.3Update – June 2006
9.11Mobile services reforms – 2007
9.11.1Commerce Commission puts more pressure on mobile duopoly – October 2007
9.11.2Commerce Commission issues draft mobile services recommendations – August 2007
9.12Mobile services reforms – 2006
9.12.1Market developments – 2006
9.13Wholesale access
9.13.1Operational separation
9.13.2Market analysis – 2007
9.13.3Market developments – 2006
9.14Number Portability (NP)
9.14.1Market developments – 2007
9.14.2Background
9.15Telecommunications Information Privacy Code
10.COMPANY PROFILES AND ANALYSES
10.1Telecom Corporation of New Zealand
10.1.1Company information
10.1.2Revenue statistics – 2006-2007
10.1.3Market developments and strategy overview
10.1.4Company structure
10.1.5Mobile services
10.1.6The network
10.1.7Subsidiary and associate companies
10.1.8Outsourcing agreements
10.1.9Other services
10.1.10Brief company history to 2004
10.1.11Financial year – 2007
10.1.12Analysis – late 2007
10.1.13Strategy overview
10.1.14Analysis of the reforms on operational separation
10.1.15AAPT aligns with PowerTel
10.2TelstraClear Limited
10.2.1Company information
10.2.2Operating statistics
10.2.3The network
10.2.4Company analysis
10.2.5Company history
10.2.6Products and services
10.3Vodafone New Zealand Ltd
10.3.1Company information
10.3.2Major acquisitions
10.3.3The network
10.3.4Reseller agreements
10.3.5Financial results – 2007
10.3.6Subscriber and operating statistics
10.3.7Company analyses
10.3.8Company history
10.3.9Products and services
11.GLOSSARY OF ABBREVIATIONS
Exhibit 1 – Key revenue trends – period to 2015
Exhibit 2 – BuddeComm VoIP quality survey
Exhibit 3 – Timeline for LLU, ADSL2+, and NGN rollout, and operational separation
Exhibit 4 – Fibre network overview by provider
Exhibit 5 – Regulatory timeline – scheduled UBA launch by service variant
Exhibit 6 – Understanding wholesale bitstream offers around the world
Exhibit 7 – Telecom Corporation New Zealand at a glance
Exhibit 8 – Potential new organisational structure of Telecom – 2007
Exhibit 9 - Telecom’s subsidiary companies
Exhibit 10 - Telecom’s associate companies
Exhibit 11 – TelstraClear Ltd at a glance
Exhibit 12 – Vodafone New Zealand Ltd at a glance
Exhibit 13 – Comparison of Vodafone’s 3G mobile networks


Table 1 – Total market revenue by major service – 2004 - 2009
Table 2 – Annual change of total market revenue by service – 2005 - 2009
Table 3 – New Zealand market – local access and calling revenues – 2003 - 2009
Table 4 – Total market – local service & calling revenue by provider – 2003 - 2008
Table 5 – Country statistics – 2007
Table 6 – Telecom revenue statistics – 2007 - 2009
Table 7 – Telephone network statistics – 2007
Table 8 – Internet provider statistics – 2007
Table 9 – Internet user statistics – June 2007
Table 10 – Broadband statistics – June 2007
Table 11 – Mobile statistics – June 2007
Table 12 – Broadcasting statistics – 2007
Table 13 – ihug subscribers by market segment (New Zealand only) – 2004 - 2006
Table 14 – ihug revenue and annual change – 2001 - 2006
Table 15 – iiNet revenue by region (Australia & New Zealand) and annual change – 2005 - 2006
Table 16 – iiNet profit before tax by region (Australia and New Zealand) – 2005 - 2006
Table 17 – Total telco market revenue by major provider – 2003 - 2009
Table 18 – Annual change of total telco market revenue by major provider – 2004 - 2009
Table 19 – Percentage breakdown of total telco market revenue by major provider – 2003 - 2009
Table 20 - Telecom Group operating highlights and annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 21 – Telecom Group operating revenues by service and annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 22 – Telecom Group operating revenues by industry segment and annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 23 – Telecom – New Zealand operations: operating revenues by service & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 24 – TelstraClear total revenue and annual change – 2005 - 2008
Table 25 – Total market revenue by major service – 2004 - 2009
Table 26 – Annual change of total market revenue by service – 2005 - 2009
Table 27 – Percentage breakdown of total market revenue by major service – 2004 - 2009
Table 28 – Mobile market revenues by operator – 1997 - 2009
Table 29 – Mobile market revenue growth by operator – 1998 - 2009
Table 30 – Mobile market revenue market share by operator – 1997 - 2009
Table 31 – Data market revenue – broadband, dial-up and other data – 2004 - 2009
Table 32 – Data market revenue growth – broadband, dial-up and other data – 2005 - 2009
Table 33 – Data market revenue percentage breakdown – broadband, dial-up & other data – 2005 - 2008
Table 34 – ISP revenue estimates and annual change – 2002 - 2009
Table 35 – Local access and calling revenues and annual change – 2003 - 2009
Table 36 – Total market: local service & calling revenue by provider – 2003 - 2008
Table 37 – Total market: annual change in local service & calling revenue by provider – 2001 - 2008
Table 38 – Market share: local service & calling revenue by provider – 2003 - 2008
Table 39 – Telecommunications services revenue by market – 2005; 2007; 2010; 2015
Table 40 – Telecommunications services revenue share by market – 2005; 2007; 2010; 2015
Table 41 – Telecommunications services revenue by product – 2000; 2005; 2007; 2010; 2015
Table 42 – Telecommunications services revenue share by product – 2000; 2005; 2007; 2010; 2015
Table 43 – ‘Internet economy’ telco revenue – 2000; 2005; 2007; 2010; 2015
Table 44 – ‘Internet economy’ telco percentage of revenue – 2000; 2005; 2007; 2010; 2015
Table 45 – ‘Internet economy’ telco revenue – 2005; 2007; 2010; 2015
Table 46 – Access % of total telecoms spend – 2000; 2005; 2007; 2010; 2015
Table 47 – Content/advertising % total telecoms spend – 2000; 2005; 2007; 2010; 2015
Table 48 – Telecommunications services revenue by industry group – 2005; 2007; 2010; 2015
Table 49 – Telecommunications services revenue % by industry group – 2005; 2007; 2010; 2015
Table 50 – New Zealand market: local access and calling revenues – 2003 - 2009
Table 51 – Total market: local service & calling revenue by provider – 2003 - 2008
Table 52 – Total market: annual change in local service & calling revenue by provider – 2001 - 2008
Table 53 – Market share: local service & calling revenue by provider – 2003 - 2008
Table 54 – Telecom: New Zealand operations – local access, calling revenues & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 55 – New Zealand operations: total local service revenue – consumer, business & wholesale &annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 56 – New Zealand operations: total local service revenue – business, residential, smartphone & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 57 – New Zealand operations revenue: national, international, other & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 58 – New Zealand operations revenue: national, calls to mobile, 0800 & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 59 – New Zealand operations revenue: consumer, business, wholesale & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 60 – New Zealand operations revenue: international & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 61 – Telecom access lines and annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 62 – Telecom call minutes by call type & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 63 – Telecom call: average call price by call type & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 64 – Fixed-line residential low user basket – November 2006
Table 65 – Fixed-line residential medium user basket – November 2006
Table 66 – Fixed-line residential high user basket – November 2006
Table 67 – Fixed-line business SOHO basket – November 2006
Table 68 – Telecom average prices – 2006
Table 69 – New Zealand TSO annual cost – 2002 - 2006
Table 70 - Telecom Group operating highlights & annual change – 12 months to June 2007
Table 71 – Telecom Group operating revenues by service and annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 72 – New Zealand operations: operating revenues by service & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 73 – TCNZA revenue summary (historical) & annual change – 2000 - 2006
Table 74 - Telecom Group operating highlights & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 75 – Telecom Group operating revenues by service & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 76 – Telecom Group operating revenues by industry segment & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 77 – Telecom Group voice (calling) revenue & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 78 – Telecom Group EBIT by industry segment & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 79 – Telecom Group expenses & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 80 – Telecom Group capital expenditure & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 81 - Capital expenditure – 1998 - 2007
Table 82 – New Zealand operations: operating revenues by service & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 83 – New Zealand operations: expenses a& annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 84 – New Zealand operations: EBITDA & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 85 – New Zealand operations: total local service revenue – consumer, business, wholesale & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 86 – New Zealand operations: total local service revenue – business, residential, smartphone & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 87 – New Zealand operations: total calling revenue & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 88 – New Zealand operations: national calling revenue – calls, calls to mobile, 0800 & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 89 – New Zealand operations: national calling revenue – consumer, business, wholesale & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 90 – New Zealand operations: international national calling revenue & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 91 – NZ operations: mobile revenue & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 92 – NZ operations: mobile ARPU & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 93 – Telecom NZ data revenue by sector & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 94 – Telecom NZ data revenue by business, wholesale & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 95 – NZ operations: broadband & Internet revenue & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 96 – NZ operations: broadband revenue – consumer, business, wholesale & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 97 – Australian operations: operating revenues by service & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 98 – Australian operations: expenses & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 99 – Australian operations: EBITDA & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 100 - Telecom Group financial results & annual change – 2005 - 2006
Table 101 – Total revenue, expenses, EBITDA, EBIT, CAPEX & annual change – 2006 - 2007
Table 102 – Total revenue & annual change – 2005 - 2008
Table 103 - TelstraClear half year financial results & annual change – 2005 - 2006
Table 104 – Customer numbers: consumer and business – 2004; 2006
Table 105 – Residential cable network operating statistics – mid-2007
Table 106 – Vodafone 2G and 3G network cell sites – October 2006
Table 107 – Vodafone revenue overview & annual change – 1996 - 2008
Table 108 – Vodafone annual profit & annual change – 2002 - 2006
Table 109 – Monthly ARPU: prepaid, postpaid & total – 2003 - 2007
Table 110 – Vodafone subscribers & annual change – 1998 - 2007
Table 111 – Vodafone subscribers by quarter – 2004 - 2007
Table 112 – Vodafone subscriber statistics by network – 2005 - 2006
Table 113 – Voice minute usage on network – 2005 - 2007


Related Documents

Report Profile

Annual Publication

Technologies
Broadband - Fixed
Internet
Mobile - Voice
Strategies & Analyses (Industry & Markets)
Telecoms - Data Services
Telecoms - Voice Services
Telecoms Infrastructure

Number of pages: 192

Status: Archived

Last update: 15 September 2008
View update history

NOTE: This report has been archived

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