Ericsson Leads Wireless Race                    But Nokia, Nortel Step on Gas
                     By DAVID PRINGLE                     WSJ.COM
                     In the race to build the wireless Internet, Telefon AB L.M. Ericsson has set                    the pace. But the next 12 months in Europe is a decisive lap that could                    propel Nokia Corp. and Nortel Networks Corp. into pole positions.
                     Nokia and Nortel both have scored important contracts recently, boosting                    their credibility in this lucrative segment of the mobile-communications                    industry. More importantly, the two companies appear to be gaining a                    better-than-expected share in the fast-growing wireless market, giving them                    a solid platform from which to win potentially huge third-generation                    contracts.
                     Mobile operators around the world are                    scurrying to purchase general packet radio                    services (GPRS) systems to upgrade their                    second-generation GSM (global system for mobile communications)                    networks. The purchases, while unglamorous, will allow their customers the                    ability to maintain a crucial "always on" wireless connection to the Internet.
                     Vendors won't reveal the size of the contracts they have won, so it is                    impossible to tell who is ahead in revenue terms. But by using the numbers                    of contracts won as a crude barometer, Finland's Nokia is close behind                    Sweden's Ericsson, the world's leading wireless-network vendor. Nokia                    claims to have won 40 GPRS contracts world-wide, compared with 44 for                    Ericsson. Also, Nokia has signed on some of Europe's heavyweight mobile                    operators, including Telefonica Moviles of Spain, Viag Interkom of                    Germany, and Cegetel of France.
                     Meanwhile, Canada's Nortel, which largely missed out on the GSM                    market, claims to have won 20 contracts to supply GPRS systems. Nortel                    holds a decent-sized lead among the smaller players; seven operators have                    chosen Motorola Inc. to supply their GPRS systems, while another 16                    operators are testing its system. Lucent Technologies Inc., Alcatel SA and                    Siemens AG also are players in the GPRS market, but each has only a                    handful of contracts.
                     In Europe, Nokia has stolen the top spot from Ericsson, according to the                    research firm Yankee Group. The research firm estimates that Nokia has                    won 36% of the GPRS contracts awarded so far in Europe, while Ericsson                    has 24%. Simone Lewis, a London-based analyst with Yankee, says that                    Ericsson supplied about 40% of the Continent's GSM networks.
                     To be sure, these figures don't necessarily correspond to market share in                    revenue terms. The actual value of a GPRS contract will depend greatly on                    the size of the operator's network and whether the vendor is the principal                    or peripheral supplier -- and there is still plenty to play for. Ericsson                    estimates that two-thirds of the 373 GSM operators in the world today will                    launch GPRS services this year. Only two GPRS networks currently are in                    operation, and one of them is a pilot program.
                     But the battle in the GPRS market really is just a sparring match before the                    real contest -- the fight to win contracts for third-generation systems.
                     "GPRS [systems] allow vendors to show off their expertise and try to                    convince operators to go with their third-generation solution," Ms. Lewis                    says. "There isn't a lot of money in the GPRS market; vendors are in it                    purely for strategic reasons."
                     Deutsche Telekom AG's T-Mobil unit, which began a pilot of its GPRS                    service last week, says it spent 153 million euros ($145.7 million)                    upgrading its network. But analysts say that many European operators will                    spend less than half of that amount on upgrades.
                     By contrast, contracts to install third-generation systems could be worth                    more than a billion euros each, providing a very healthy boost to the                    vendors' revenues. T-Mobil expects to spend 7.5 billion marks (3.83                    billion euros) to build its universal mobile telecommunications systems                    network -- work that is expected to be spread among several suppliers.
                     It's not surprising that telecom firms are racing each other to win contracts.                    Nokia's networks division, which supplies both fixed and wireless                    networks, recorded sales of 1.5 billion euros in the first quarter, while                    Ericsson's network division posted sales of 2.5 billion euros in the mobile                    market.
                     But the market for third-generation systems still is very much in its infancy.                    Regardless, Ms. Lewis regards Ericsson as the clear early leader. Nokia                    has picked up four third-generation contracts so far, compared with six for                    Ericsson, which has contracts to supply third-generation systems to the                    world's two largest mobile-phone operators.
                     Vodafone AirTouch PLC in May said that Ericsson will be its main                    supplier in the United Kingdom, while NTT DoCoMo Inc. in Japan also                    has chosen the Swedish company. However, the sheer size of the UMTS                    contracts means that operators are likely to use more than one                    infrastructure supplier. Nokia and Ericsson both claim Japan Telecom Co.                    as a customer, for example.
                     Although Ms. Lewis says Nortel is currently No. 4 in the                    wireless-infrastructure market, she expects the company to win more                    third-generation contracts than Motorola. Nortel recently won a hefty                    third-generation contract from BT Cellnet, the mobile-phone unit of British                    Telecommunications PLC, which has used Motorola's systems in the past.                    Nortel also claims to have memoranda of understanding with three French                    operators.
                     U.S. research firm Herschel Shosteck Associates believes Nortel is the                    best-placed of all the infrastructure suppliers in the fledgling market for                    third-generation systems. Herschel Shosteck says Nortel's expertise in the                    fixed-Internet market and its focus on keeping costs down should give it an                    advantage over its rivals. Nortel "is transmitting a message of cost-saving                    and efficiencies for network operators, which will be a critical differentiator                    for them," Jane Zweig, executive vice president at Herschel Shosteck,                    says.
                     Lucent, which is running trials with several U.S. mobile-phone operators,                    also is expected to be a key player in the third-generation market outside                    of Europe.
                     But in the European market, the next year will be a telling period. Licenses                    for third-generation networks based on UMTS technology already have                    been awarded in the U.K., Spain and Switzerland, while governments                    across the rest of western Europe are expected to follow suit before the                    end of this year.
                     Todd Etchieson, senior manager of UMTS marketing at Nortel, says that                    most operators will award UMTS contracts within a few months of winning                    a license. "We are talking about 60 contracts and sometime in the second                    quarter of next year, it will be over," he says.
                     Write to David Pringle at david.pringle@wsj.com |