To: Victor Lazlo who wrote (61460 ) 9/28/2002 3:29:16 PM From: Lizzie Tudor Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 77400 SPECIAL REPORT When Will the Telecom Depression End? The sector's disaster girds the globe, growing in one place just when it could abate elsewhere. Plus, France Telecom: Plenty of promise -- and debt businessweek.com This says network traffic growing at 85%/year, with 35% current capacity utilization. This sounds at about midpoint between the bears scenario (we will *never* utilize all the bandwidth out there) vs. the bulls (internet traffic growing 4 fold/year).BusinessWeek spent a month examining the capacity for each type of telecom service, from long-distance to wireless, and comparing it to worldwide demand. The results show that capacity continues to dwarf demand. Prices in America and Europe remain under pressure. Meanwhile, rollouts of new cables promise to extend excess capacity to regions such as Asia that have been spared much of the pain to date. The upshot is that the crisis could last until at least 2004. In the U.S., traffic at the core of the networks is leaping ahead at 85% a year, with Europe and Asia at similar paces. Within two years, that should soak up excess capacity of networks in operation, which are running at 35% of capacity in the U.S. and Europe and at higher rates in Asia. An economic upturn, expected by the end of 2003, could spell recovery for U.S. telecom carriers six months later. Europe is expected to follow suit in late 2004. But things could get worse. If the world economy continues to struggle or if telecom companies fail to lop off capacity and come up with lucrative new data services, this depression could continue through 2006. Even when recovery arrives, most of the once-robust telecom players are likely to perform, at best, like stolid, slow-growing utilities through the end of this decade."