Showing posts with label Colombia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colombia. Show all posts

21 Jan 2009

Spetrum caps set to hamper mobile broadband development in Latin America?

Given that I am currently tweaking the draft agenda for the annual Americas Com conference (this year: Rio de Janeiro, 31 June & 1 July), one of the lead stories in today's Global Mobile Daily is especially useful food for thought. GMD notes that the GSMA is urging Latin American regulators to relax spectrum caps which the Association feels to be hampering the development of mobile broadband services in the region.

According to a study commissioned for the GSMA, spectrum caps in Latin America are among the most restrictive in the world: a maximum of 40MHz is allowed per operator in Colombia, 50 MHz in Argentina, 60 MHz in Chile, 65 MHz in Mexico and 80 MHz in Brazil. This compared with over 300 MHz of spectrum available in most North American and European markets. Assuming this continues to be an inhibiting factor for the region's MNOs, I daresay it will be a major topic for discussion at the conference. I will encourage colleagues to consult with the good folks at 3G Americas in order to get a sense of how much discussion time is merited by this particular issues. At the event, 3G Americas President Chris Pearson will lead the usual Executive Briefing his organisation has traditionally offered to delegates.

5 Sept 2008

Millicom CEO: scale is not the key in Latin America, Africa


During the long run-in to next week's Americas Com conference in Rio de Janeiro, I naturally look fairly closely at the competitive landscape in most the countries of Latin America. In the mobile space, this can be summarised in many markets as a battle between varying combinations of three companies. Two of these are telecoms giants - America Movil and Telefonica. The third is a smaller business headquartered in Luxembourg, Millicom International Cellular.


Millicom, whose services across Latin America are branded Tigo, is present in El Salvador and Guatemala and Honduras, where its local operations are market leaders. In South America, the company is present in Bolivia, Colombia. and Paraguay. Millicom has the largest market share only in the last of these three South American markets.

Earlier this week, in an interview with Investor's Business Daily, Millicom CEO Marc Beuls denied that larger competitors enjoy overwhelming competitive advantages: "Size isn't a reason for any of our competitors to be more successful in these markets than us. In Latin America, we compete against two giants, America Movil and Telefonica. This industry has more to do with innovation and launching new products and services, not so much technology, because much of that is the same among operators."

Having visited two Tigo-branded cellcos' HQs back in April (in Paraguay and Bolivia), I was disappointed not to have secured the participation of either for next week's conference. Frankly, across the group (in Latin America, Africa and SE Asia) we find Millicom subsidiaries to be a little wary of speaking or otherwise having a very visible presence at our conferences. We hope to resolve that in 2009.
Beuls says that "it was only three years ago that we started focusing on Africa and began investing substantial amounts of money. We've been able to improve our market position in most markets, the only exception being Sierra Leone. In Ghana, our largest market in revenue, we're No. 2 out of four operators. We're No. 3 in Tanzania, with 22% share, and gaining ground on the two largest operators."
Noting Vodafone's move on the Ghanaian market, the interviewer asked Beuls whether bigger operators have an edge because they can purchase mobile phones in large volumes and sell them in retail stores priced as low as $20. Beuls responds: "We don't play the handset game. We don't sell any handsets in Africa. The handset supply is there. A lot of the phones you find at (retail) dealers are second-hand, used phones. You can get a mobile phone at any price, a used one for $10 or a new one for $200. There is no need to get involved in that part of the market, whereas in Latin America operators are involved in the phone business."
Buels was asked whether bigger groups enjoyed advantages around roaming. Zain's promotion of services across national boundaries was mentioned, something which is now more relevant for Millicom given the Kuwaiti-headquartered cellco's presence in some 15 African countries.

Beuls argues that in the prepaid segment in Africa there is not much value in roaming: "Those customers are not mobile, they're not traveling. Maybe they're going from town to town, but not out of the country."
I am not closely involved in our Africa-specific events. These are managed by my colleague Julie Rey. However, I am close enough to the action to say confidently that October's Africa Com conference in Cape Town looks set to be bigger, busier and more exciting than ever. I daresay some of the questions mulled over this week by Millicom's Beuls will be discussed on stage and offline at the event.

1 Sept 2008

Millicom 3G deployment announced across entire LatAm footprint


Telecoms.com, the leading news and opinion telecoms sector website operated by Informa Telecoms & Media, reports today that Millicom International Cellular plans to have launched 3G services in all of its Latin American markets by the end of this year. The mobile group, headquartered in Luxembourg has already launched 3G in Guatemala, Honduras and Bolivia. Launches in Paraguay (today), El Salvador (tomorrow) and Colombia (by the end of 2008) are all set to follow.

I had the pleasure of visiting two of Millicom's Tigo-branded operations while touring South America in April this year. In both Paraguay and Bolivia, I was struck by the very high visibility of the brand. I also learned a little about the Bolivian operation's WiMAX launch, but was in the country a little too early for the full commercial 3G deployment.

This recent announcement supports my personal belief that tech vendors looking to tap into major big CAPEX in Latin America will soon need to look beyond the strong growth story in mobile. Once 3G networks are rolled out across the whole region, I wonder which technology area will offer the best growth prospects. It was this line of thinking which prompted us to broaden the focus of our long established Latin America region conference and exhibition. What was once 'GSM Americas', is now a more holistic event in terms of welcoming every kind of telecoms service provider - fixed/mobile/integrated; traditional telecoms space/cable MSO/emerging forms of service provider.

This year's event is imminent. My team and I board the plane to Rio de Janeiro this Saturday in time to set up for next week's conference on 9-10 September. We'd love to see you there. If you represent any telecoms operator, we can still admit you free of charge. Register at:
www.ComWorldSeries.com/americas