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2010 Sweden - Telecoms, IP Networks, Digital Media and Forecasts

Publication Overview

This report provides a comprehensive overview of trends and developments in Sweden’s telecommunications market. The report analyses the mobile, Internet, broadband, digital TV and converging media sectors. Subjects include:

  • Market and industry analyses, trends and developments;
  • Facts, figures and statistics;
  • Industry and regulatory issues;
  • Infrastructure;
  • Major players, revenues, subscribers, ARPU, MoU;
  • Internet, VoIP, IPTV;
  • Mobile voice and data markets;
  • Broadband (FttH, DSL, cable TV, wireless);
  • Convergence and digital media;
  • 3G subscriber and mobile ARPU forecasts to 2015;
  • Broadband market forecasts for selective years to 2020.

Researcher:- Henry Lancaster
Current publication date:- January 2011(9th Edition)
Next publication date:- November 2011

Executive Summary

Sweden’s three LTE operators to provide near national coverage by 2012

BuddeComm’s annual publication, Sweden - Telecoms, IP Networks, Digital Media and Forecasts, provides a comprehensive overview of the trends and developments in the telecommunications and digital media markets in Sweden.

Sweden’s telecom market increased 1% in 2009 and an estimated 1.5% in 2010. In this respect, the country has bucked the trend commonly seen elsewhere in Europe where the telecom sector revenue has slid in line with falling GDP. The market has continued the trend for consumer migration to mobile voice and data services at the expense of fixed-line telephony.

More calls are now made via mobile networks than the fixed network, while there are as many mobile broadband subscriptions as there are via the copper network. The value of the fixed-line sector has fallen since 2005 under the impact of cheaper mobile call rates and the wider use of mature and commercialised VoIP services. More than a third of the population only use mobile phones for calls, having ditch fixed-line telephony altogether.

Sweden was the first country in Europe to develop a broadband policy, as early as 1999. The country now has one of the highest broadband penetration rates in the region, and ranks among the top countries within the OECD. DSL is the principal medium for broadband access, while cable also has a significant footprint and fibre networks have expanded rapidly. Given this excellent infrastructure, WLAN, BPL and satellite technologies have only a niche presence.

Broadband growth in Sweden has been driven by some of the lowest access prices in Europe, and strong government support. Overall Internet revenue increased by an estimated 4% in 2010, largely due to the growth in the number of subscribers since broadband ARPU has fallen in response to pricing competition among players.

Sweden is one of the world’s leading countries for fibre deployment. This has been encouraged by the high proportion of the population which live within the greater areas of the three largest cities, many of whom live in apartment buildings. These were among the first areas to be covered by fibre, given the cheaper infrastructure costs incurred.

A large proportion of Swedes also live in small towns and villages, many now being served by muni fibre as operators extend their networks to these areas. Operators have been able to bear the additional cost of building networks in semi-urban environments because uptake among customers is sufficiently strong, while in the more rural areas Swedes have been able to perform much of the civil engineering themselves.

The country was the first in the EU to develop widespread local access fibre infrastructure. Numerous networks open to a range of content and service providers have been built by organisations other than telcos, including municipalities, regional governments, housing associations and local utilities. Municipal and local area networks have quadrupled in reach since 1999.

Mobile penetration in Sweden far exceeds the EU average. Market saturation has led to slower subscriber growth in recent years (the increase in the number of subscribers since 2008 has been entirely through 3G). This has been mirrored by greater consumer uptake of mobile data services made possible by significant network investment, particularly in HSPA and LTE networks: sector investment reached about €180 million in 2009 and an estimated 200 million in 2010.

In addition, consumers are moving to mobile telephony for the majority of calls – in 2007 for the first time, total revenue from services in mobile networks exceeded fixed telephony revenue, while in the first half of 2010 the volume of mobile outgoing call minutes overtook fixed minutes for the first time. In addition, a third of all broadband subscriptions are for mobile broadband services provided by MNOs.

Sweden also has one of the most developed digital TV markets in the Nordic region. The government awarded multiplex licences as early as 1998. Multiplex ownership is separated from content broadcast over them: Teracom built, owns and operates the digital TV multiplex. When the DTTV network was launched in early 1999, Sweden was only the second country in Europe to have the system. The five-stage phased analogue switch-over process was completed by late 2007, ahead of schedule.

Key telecom parameters – 2009 – 2011

Sector

2009

2011 (e)

Broadband:

Fixed broadband subscribers (million)

2.94

3.07

Fixed broadband penetration rate

35%

40%

Mobile broadband subscribers (million)

1.31

1.95

Subscribers to telecoms services:

Fixed-line telephony (million)

5.55

4.8

Mobile phone (million)

11.64

15.0

Mobile SIM penetration (population)

133%

141%

(Source: BuddeComm)

Market highlights:

  • Over half of all TV homes in Sweden have a cable TV connection. Com Hem, the country’s leading cable broadband and TV operator, was put up for sale by its owners at the end of 2010. The company’s profitability and growing subscriber base will make this one of the key transactions in the sector in 2011. Around 95% of the operator’s network, passing some 1.76 million homes, can provide a 100Mb/s service, which should shield it from customer churn to the growing reach of fibre networks
  • The planned auction of the 800MHz frequency band in early 2011 will provide 15-year national licences free for mobile broadband services. Given that the 800MHz band is suitable for wide-area coverage in sparsely populated areas, the regulator has imposed coverage requirements on one of the licences for areas with poor broadband access. This will go some way to meeting the objectives of the government’s Broadband Strategy programme. Sweden is also among the leading EU countries to assign 900MHz spectrum for 3G use.
  • Mobile data use has grown considerably since 2007, and is set to grow more rapidly during the next few years at TeliaSonera’s LTE network expands to 28 or more of the principal cities. In addition, Net4Mobility (the joint project of Telenor and Tele20) launched commercial LTE offers in late 2010 and expected to cover 99% of the population by the end of 2012, providing speeds of up to 80Mb/s in rural areas and up to 150Mb/s in urban areas. Data traffic is expected to pass 50,000TB in 2012, compared to 13.7 in 2009.
  • Swedish municipal broadband has successfully adopted the ‘stadsnätt’ urban area network model, by which a city builds and administers fibre infrastructure which is then rented at cost price to service providers which set up their own transmission equipment. In Stockholm more than 30 organisations have built their facilities through the municipality’s open fibre network, operated by Stokab. The model has been adopted elsewhere in Europe, notably in the Netherlands, in a bid to extend fibre deeper into the regions.

This report is essential reading for those needing high level strategic information and objective analysis on the telecom sector in Sweden. It provides further information on:

  • Market liberalisation and regulatory issues;
  • The impact of the global economic crisis;
  • Telecoms operators – privatisation, acquisitions, new licences;
  • Mobile data market developments in coming years in light of spectrum auctions and new license awards in 2010;
  • 3G developments, regulatory issues and technologies including HSPA and LTE;
  • Broadband migration to an FttH architecture;
  • Historical and current subscriber statistics and forecasts;
  • ARPU statistics and forecasts.

Data in this report is the latest available at the time of preparation and may not be for the current year.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Key statistics
  • 2. Telecommunications Market
    • 2.1 Overview of Sweden’s telecom market
  • 3. Regulatory Environment
    • 3.1 History
    • 3.2 Regulatory authority
      • 3.2.1 National Post and Telecom Agency
    • 3.3 Telecom sector liberalisation in Sweden
      • 3.3.1 Privatisation of Telia
      • 3.3.2 Interconnect
      • 3.3.3 Access
      • 3.3.4 Number portability (NP)
      • 3.3.5 Carrier PreSelection (CPS)
      • 3.3.6 Wholesale Line Rental (WLR)
  • 4. Fixed Network Market
    • 4.1 Overview of operators
      • 4.1.1 Fixed-line statistics
    • 4.2 TeliaSonera
      • 4.2.1 Restructuring
      • 4.2.2 Functional separation of TeliaSonera
    • 4.3 Tele2
    • 4.4 Telenor Sweden
  • 5. Telecommunications Infrastructure
    • 5.1 National telecom network
    • 5.2 International infrastructure
      • 5.2.1 Submarine cable networks
      • 5.2.2 Satellite networks
  • 6. Broadband Market
    • 6.1 Overview
    • 6.2 Government support
    • 6.3 Broadband strategy – 2010
    • 6.4 Broadband strategy – 2020
    • 6.5 E-Government
    • 6.6 E-Health
    • 6.7 Competition
    • 6.8 Broadband statistics
    • 6.9 Cable
      • 6.9.1 Com Hem
    • 6.10 Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL)
      • 6.10.1 Regulatory concerns
      • 6.10.2 Open access
      • 6.10.3 ADSL2+
      • 6.10.4 VDSL2+
    • 6.11 Fibre-to-the-Home (FttH) networks
      • 6.11.1 Overview
      • 6.11.2 TeliaSonera
      • 6.11.3 Regulating dark fibre
      • 6.11.4 Bredbandsbolaget
      • 6.11.5 PiteEnergi
      • 6.11.6 Other developments
    • 6.12 Broadband Powerline (BPL)
    • 6.13 Mobile broadband
      • 6.13.1 Fixed Wireless Access (FWA)
      • 6.13.2 Wireless LANS
      • 6.13.3 WiFi/WiMAX
      • 6.13.4 Satellite
  • 7. Digital Media
    • 7.1 Convergence
      • 7.1.1 Overview of media convergence
      • 7.1.2 Key general trends
      • 7.1.3 Digital media
      • 7.1.4 Regulatory issues
    • 7.2 Digital TV
      • 7.2.1 Market overview
      • 7.2.2 Broadband TV (IPTV)
      • 7.2.3 Video-on-Demand (VoD)
      • 7.2.4 Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
      • 7.2.5 Interactive TV (iTV)
      • 7.2.6 Cable TV
      • 7.2.7 Satellite-based digital pay TV developments
      • 7.2.8 Digital terrestrial TV (DTTV)
      • 7.2.9 Free-to-Air (FTA) TV
  • 8. Mobile Communications
    • 8.1 Overview of Sweden’s mobile market
      • 8.1.1 Mobile statistics
      • 8.1.2 Operator market shares
    • 8.2 Regulatory issues
      • 8.2.1 Spectrum regulations and spectrum auctions
      • 8.2.2 Roaming
      • 8.2.3 Mobile Number portability (MNP)
      • 8.2.4 Mobile termination rates (MTRs)
      • 8.2.5 Network sharing
    • 8.3 Mobile technologies
      • 8.3.1 Analogue
      • 8.3.2 Digital
      • 8.3.3 Third Generation (3G) mobile
    • 8.4 Major mobile operators
      • 8.4.1 Telia Mobile
      • 8.4.2 Tele2 Mobile
      • 8.4.3 Telenor Mobile
      • 8.4.4 Hutchison 3G Sweden
      • 8.4.5 Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNOs)
      • 8.4.6 Mobile Virtual Network Enablers (MVNEs)
    • 8.5 Mobile voice services
      • 8.5.1 Prepaid
      • 8.5.2 Satellite mobile
    • 8.6 Mobile Messaging
      • 8.6.1 Short Message Service (SMS)
      • 8.6.2 Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS)
    • 8.7 Mobile data services
      • 8.7.1 Overview
      • 8.7.2 General Packet Radio Service (GPRS)
      • 8.7.3 High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA)
      • 8.7.4 High-Speed Circuit-Switched Data (HSCSD)
      • 8.7.5 Enhanced Data for GSM evolution (EDGE)
      • 8.7.6 iPhone
      • 8.7.7 Push-to-Talk (PTT)
      • 8.7.8 Long-term evolution (LTE)
      • 8.7.9 Femtocells
      • 8.7.10 Mobile TV
    • 8.8 Mobile content and applications
      • 8.8.1 Location-based services
      • 8.8.2 Mobile music
      • 8.8.3 Other developments
  • 9. Forecasts
    • 9.1 Forecasts – broadband subscribers – 2010 - 2013; 2020
      • 9.1.1 Scenario 1 – higher broadband subscriber growth
      • 9.1.2 Scenario 2 – lower broadband subscriber growth
    • 9.2 Forecasts – mobile ARPU – 2009 - 2010; 2015
    • 9.3 Forecasts – UMTS subscribers – 2010 - 2015
  • 10. Glossary of Abbreviations
  • Table 1 – Country statistics Sweden – 2010
  • Table 2 – Telecom revenue and investment statistics – 2009
  • Table 3 – Telephone network statistics – June 2010
  • Table 4 – Internet user statistics – June 2010
  • Table 5 – Broadband statistics – June 2010
  • Table 6 – Mobile statistics – June 2010
  • Table 7 – National telecommunications authority
  • Table 8 – Installed ports/leased lines – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 9 – Data communications revenue by sector – 2005 – 2009
  • Table 10 – End-user revenue by service – 1995; 1997; 1999 - 2011
  • Table 11 – End-user revenue growth: fixed line, Internet, mobile and mobile data – 1995 - 2009
  • Table 12 – Telecom revenue per household by sector – 2001 - 2009
  • Table 13 – Telecom revenue growth per household by sector – 2001 - 2009
  • Table 14 – Interconnect minutes and revenue from fixed networks – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 15 – LLU, shared access price - connection and monthly rental – 2006 – 2009
  • Table 16 – Unbundled loops and access lines – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 17 – Fixed broadband access by speed – 2000 - 2010
  • Table 18 – Internet access by data speed as a proportion of households – 1997 - 2010
  • Table 19 – Proportion of Internet revenue by access type – 2000 - 2010
  • Table 20 – Growth in Internet access by type – 1996 - 2010
  • Table 21 – Broadband subscribers by type, provider – 2007 - 2009
  • Table 22 – Broadband penetration by technology – 2006 - 2011
  • Table 23 – 3.7GHz licence results – 2009
  • Table 24 – Proportion of subscribers to bundled services, by service – 2009 - 2010
  • Table 25 – VoIP revenue – 2008 - 2009
  • Table 26 – Mobile operators, subscribers and annual change – September 2010
  • Table 27 – End-user revenue by service – 1995; 1997; 1999 - 2011
  • Table 28 – Total mobile call services and data revenue – 2008 - 2011
  • Table 29 – European retail roaming charges – 2007 - 2011
  • Table 30 – European wholesale roaming charges – 2009 - 2011
  • Table 31 – Mobile termination revenue traffic and revenue – 2000 - 2009
  • Table 32 – Mobile subscriber revenue: contract and prepaid (SEK) – 2000 - 2010
  • Chart 1 – End-user traffic in minutes by technology – 2000 - 2010
  • Chart 2 – TeliaSonera wholesale lines, PSTN, LLU – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 3 – Cumulative fixed numbers ported – 2004 - 2011
  • Chart 4 – Carrier preselection customers, residential and business – 1999 - 2010
  • Chart 5 – Wholesale Line Rental customers, households and business – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 6 – Market share of fixed-telephony subscribers by operator – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 7 – Fixed call services revenue – 2000 - 2011
  • Chart 8 – Fixed telephony PSTN subscriptions – 2000 - 2010
  • Chart 9 – Fixed telephony subscriptions: alternative IP access – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 10 – TeliaSonera subscribers (Sweden) – 2002 - 2010
  • Chart 11 – TeliaSonera Group subscribers – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 12 - TeliaSonera Group financial data – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 13 – Tele2 Sweden financial revenue by sector – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 14 - Tele2 Group financial overview – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 15 – Tele2 Sweden subscribers by sector – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 16 – Telenor subscribers by sector – 2004 - 2010
  • Chart 17 – Telenor Sweden fixed-line revenue – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 18 – Telenor Sweden financial data – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 19 – Fixed lines in service and teledensity – 1995 - 2011
  • Chart 20 – Internet services revenue by household – 2003 - 2011
  • Chart 21 – Broadband market share by operator – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 22 – Internet ARPU- 2002 - 2011
  • Chart 23 – Internet users and penetration rate – 1996 - 2011
  • Chart 24 – Proportion of Internet subscribers by type – 2000 - 2010
  • Chart 25 – Dial-up Internet subscribers – 2000 - 2011
  • Chart 26 – Total Internet subscribers – 2000 – 2011
  • Chart 27 – Fixed-line broadband subscribers by access type – 2004 - 2011
  • Chart 28 – Cable broadband subscribers – 2000 - 2011
  • Chart 29 – Canal Digital cable broadband subscribers – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 30 – Com Hem subscriber statistics – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 31 – Com Hem financial statistics – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 32 – xDSL subscribers – 2000 - 2011
  • Chart 33 – TeliaSonera broadband ARPU – 2005 - 2009
  • Chart 34 – TeliaSonera broadband revenue – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 35 – TeliaSonera broadband subscribers (Sweden) – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 36 – Tele2 broadband financial data (Sweden) – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 37 – Tele2 broadband subscribers (Sweden) – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 38 – Fibre subscribers – 2002 - 2011
  • Chart 39 – Bredbandsbolaget (Telenor) subscribers by sector – 2004 - 2010
  • Chart 40 – Bredbandsbolaget (Telenor) fixed-line revenue – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 41 – Mobile broadband subscribers – 2006 - 2011
  • Chart 42 – Tele2 mobile broadband subscribers and ARPU – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 43 – Subscribers to bundled services, by service – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 44 – Digital TV subscribers – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 45 – IPTV subscribers by sector – 2006 - 2011
  • Chart 46 – MTG IPTV subscribers – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 47 – TeliaSonera IPTV subscribers – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 48 – VoIP subscribers and annual change – 2004 - 2011
  • Chart 49 – VoIP traffic– 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 50 – VoIP access by technology – 2004 - 2011
  • Chart 51 – TeliaSonera VoIP subscribers – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 52 – Telenor VoIP subscribers – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 53 – Cable TV subscribers by sector – 2006 - 2011
  • Chart 54 – Com Hem subscriber statistics – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 55 – Com Hem financial statistics – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 56 – Canal Digital cable TV subscribers (Nordics) 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 57 – Satellite TV subscribers – 2007 – 2010; 2015
  • Chart 58 – Canal Digital DTH pay-TV subscribers (Nordics) – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 59 – Viasat Broadcasting financial data – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 60 – Viasat subscribers – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 61 – Viasat VAS subscribers (Nordics) – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 62 – Boxer subscribers – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 63 – Boxer pay-TV revenue – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 64 – MTG revenue (Nordics) – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 65 – Mobile subscribers and penetration rate – 1995; 1997; 1999 - 2011
  • Chart 66 – NMT subscribers (historic) – 1999 - 2007
  • Chart 67 – GSM/UMTS and NMT subscribers (regulator data) – 2006 - 2011
  • Chart 68 – Mobile traffic in minutes and sector traffic use – 2001 - 2011
  • Chart 69 – Average mobile ARPU: contract, prepaid and blended – 2000 - 2011
  • Chart 70 – Market share of subscribers by operator (regulator data) – 2003 - 2010
  • Chart 71 – Average data roaming charges – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 72 – Cumulative mobile numbers ported – 2003 - 2011
  • Chart 73 – Annual mobile numbers ported – 2002 - 2010
  • Chart 74 – Subscriber distribution by technology – 2005 - 2011
  • Chart 75 – Telia Mobile subscribers – 2002 - 2010
  • Chart 76 – Telia Mobile blended, contract and prepaid ARPU – 2002 - 2010
  • Chart 77 – Telia Mobile financial data – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 78 – Tele2 Mobile (Sweden) subscribers – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 79 – Tele2 Mobile (Sweden) financial data – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 80 – Tele2 Mobile (Sweden) blended ARPU – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 81 – Telenor Mobile Sweden financial data – 2004 - 2010
  • Chart 82 – Telenor Mobile Sweden subscriber statistics and ARPU – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 83 – Telenor Mobile (Sweden) ARPU – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 84 – H3 subscribers (Sweden and Denmark) – 2009 - 2010
  • Chart 85 – H3 revenue (Sweden and Denmark) – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 86 – H3 annualised ARPU (Sweden and Denmark) – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 87 – Active prepaid cards – GSM/UMTS – 2000 - 2011
  • Chart 88 – Monthly SMS volumes per user – 2000 - 2011
  • Chart 89 – Annual SMS volumes – 2000 - 2011
  • Chart 90 – SMS revenue – 2000 - 2011
  • Chart 91 – MMS messages sent – 2003 - 2010
  • Chart 92 – MMS revenue and average revenue/message – 2004 - 2011
  • Chart 93 – Mobile data traffic – 2007 - 2011
  • Chart 94 – Mobile data subscribers – 2002 - 2011
  • Chart 95 – Mobile data revenue – 2002 - 2011
  • Chart 96 – Forecast broadband penetration – higher market growth scenario – 2010 - 2013; 2020
  • Chart 97 – Forecast broadband subscribers – higher market growth scenario – 2010 - 2013; 2020
  • Chart 98 – Forecast broadband penetration – lower market growth scenario – 2010 - 2013; 2020
  • Chart 99 – Forecast broadband subscribers – lower market growth scenario – 2010 - 2013; 2020
  • Chart 100 – Forecast blended mobile ARPU – 2009 - 2011; 2015
  • Chart 101 – Forecast UMTS/CDAM subscribers – 2006 - 2011; 2015
  • Exhibit 1 – EU – The New Regulatory Framework (NRF)
  • Exhibit 2 – Access and the local loop
  • Exhibit 3 – Overview of media convergence
  • Exhibit 4 – Digital dividend frequency availability - 2010
  • Exhibit 5 – UMTS licence awards in Sweden – 2000
  • Exhibit 6 – 2.6GHz licence awards in Sweden – May 2008
  • Exhibit 7 – Premium SMS market overview

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