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To: slacker711 who wrote (2789)2/20/2003 8:49:40 AM
From: 49thMIMOMander  Respond to of 9255
 
Hong Kong's CSL and Nokia to provide streaming mobile
video services
CMPnetAsia team, 20-Feb-2003

Hong Kong mobile operator CSL announced Wednesday a
cooperation with Nokia, the global leader in mobility to provide
streaming mobile video services based on technology from
RealNetworks.

CSL's video service will allow mobile consumers to access live and
on-demand video across today's GPRS network.

Through its alliance with RealNetworks, Nokia provided CSL with
Helix Universal Gateway - Mobile for streaming media delivery. This
open, multi-format media delivery platform enables CSL to stream
video and audio content to mobile terminals in several formats
including RealAudio, RealVideo, and 3GPP compliant content,
including H.263 and MPEG-4.

"Combining the efforts of the three leading companies, we are able to
bring our customers another innovative multimedia service. We are
glad that the new solution enables our customers to access live and
on-demand video over our existing network, further enriching our
mobile multimedia communication service content portfolio," said Tony
Seeto, Director of Business Development at CSL."

------

Does BREW support RTSP or PNM??

play.rbn.com



To: slacker711 who wrote (2789)3/7/2003 7:36:19 AM
From: waitwatchwander  Respond to of 9255
 
China Mobile falls out of favour The former market darling is struggling to convince investors it is still worth a punt

hoovnews.hoovers.com

March 6, 2003 9:37pm

There is little doubt that the market's love affair with China Mobile is well and truly over. The once beloved stock has fallen so far that it seems investors no longer need any reason to sell it.

The mainland's dominant mobile carrier has been the main contributor to this week's 1.75 per cent slide in the Hang Seng Index to its lowest point since October last year. In three days of selling, China Mobile shares lost 8.5 per cent in value, shaving HK$28.5 billion off the company's market capitalisation.

As the second largest stock by market capitalisation in the index, each two-cent drop in China Mobile shares would drive the Hang Seng down 1.37 points.

China Mobile yesterday closed 3.4 per cent lower at $15.60.

Now that HSBC Holdings, the index's largest stock, has managed to halt or at least limit its downward spiral, it seems that China Mobile has become the market's favourite whipping horse.

Listing in October 1997 with an initial public offer price of $11.68, China Mobile quickly became one of Hong Kong's favourite growth stocks, enjoying 60 to 70 per cent annual growth rates as millions of mainlanders signed up for its services.

With the technology bubble in full swing in the late 1990s, Mobile's share price soon reflected the hype, and the stock peaked at $79 three years ago this week.

But the high-growth story really began to unravel in June 2000, when rival China Unicom came to market, and competition reared its head.

Since then, China Mobile has been assailed by a litany of competitive and regulatory threats, and so while the company has maintained stable subscriber growth, its average revenue per user (arpu) has been moving steadily in the opposite direction.

But the competition has not only been coming from smaller rival Unicom. The company is also feeling the heat from fixed-line carriers China Telecommunications Corp and China Netcom Corp with their aggressively rolled-out xiaolingtong semi-mobile service.

The market has long expected both fixed-line carriers to eventually be awarded full wireless licences.

Even before these licences have been granted, it appears that both carriers have been given a free hand in building a citywide wireless service - the xiaolingtong or "Little Smart" - in major cities nationwide to poach low-end users from the cellular carriers.

Despite repeatedly emphasising that xiaolingtong has had only a limited impact on the firm because of its lower-end user strategy, the continuing decline of China Mobile's arpu seems to confirm the market's fears. While the Ministry of Information Industry - the regulatory body governing the telecommunications sector - has remained mute on the issue, market watchers with an eye on the stock have not.

"China Mobile is no longer the ``must have' China stock it used to be," Deutsche Bank analysts Fung Ee Lim and Tucker Grinnan said in a report released yesterday.

Deutsche Bank said the stock had "never been more attractively valued", having fallen 13 per cent since the beginning of this year, but pointed out that investors were still concerned about the same issues that had been plaguing the company for the past 2.5 years.

According to UOB Kay Hian Hong Kong director Steven Leung Wai-yuen, fund managers were now maintaining the minimum required holding in China Mobile or even underweighting it.

"Fund managers are no longer interested in the China telecoms sector. Even if you update them with the subscriber growth numbers, they are not interested. The strong growth story is no longer convincing," Mr Leung said.

DBS Vickers analyst Wallace Cheung said China Mobile could fall as far as $15 a share.

He saw the carrier as a utility stock that yielded single-digit revenue growth.

Publication: South China Morning Post

Distributed by Financial Times Information Limited - Asia Africa Intelligence Wire

Copyright © 2003 South China Morning Post. All Rights Reserved.



To: slacker711 who wrote (2789)4/18/2003 4:33:17 PM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 9255
 
Nokia Comparative Market Share, Margins, and ASP Exercise:

Nokia saw 98 million units shipped Q1 which would shake out market share this way:

Nokia            37.6 million units   38.4%
Motorola 16.7 million units 17.0%
Samsung 13.2 million units 13.5%
Siemens Not reported yet
Sony Ericsson Not reported yet
LGE 5.6 million units 5.7%

I'm guessing that when all the dust settles that Gartner, with better visibility in 6 to 8 weeks will report ~103 million units (at least) for the quarter which would shake out market share this way:

Nokia            37.6 million units   36.5%
Motorola 16.7 million units 16.2%
Samsung 13.2 million units 12.8%
Siemens Not reported yet
Sony Ericsson Not reported yet
LGE 5.6 million units 5.4%

No matter how it shakes out it was a fine quarter for both Nokia and Samsung on the handset side and MOT is definitely catching pressure from above and below.

Samsungs ASP delta between Export and Korea ($177 USD and $319 USD) amazes me. I found there estimate of industry wide sales of Color 40% and camera 10% interesting. Probably a pretty good estimate for this year. They thmselves project 68% of their handsets to be color and 21% to have cameras. Nokia hasn't been real specific about this. Nokia expects to ship 50-100 million color MMS models this year (pretty big variance in that estimate. Lehman Brothers expects them to ship 169 million units in total this year, with an average ASP of EUR 146.

Q1 ASP and Margins for the Big Three and LGE
.
ASP Margin
.
Nokia $159 USD 23.5% (Reported IAS NOT Pro Forma)
Motorola $148 USD 4.4%
Samsung ~$194 USD >21.0%
LGE ~$157 USD ~5.7%

Note: Samsung's Operating Profit for it's Telecommunications division was 20.4% but that includes infra (which is a smaller % component than Nokia's). Samsung's phome margins could be as healty as Nokia's but they have experienced some slippage while Nokia has increased margin.

The handset market overall is looking pretty healthy to me, and Nokia's position in the market is also looking pretty darned healthy.

Here are two contrasting market views (courtesy of Lehman Brothers):

MOT Handset Industry View       Nokia Handset Industry View
------------------------------ ---------------------------
Ship In Est. Sell thru Est. Sell thru Est. *
.
Q4 2001 106
Q1 2002 90 Q1 2002 91 Q1 2002 89
Q2 2002 93 Q2 2002 93 Q2 2002 95
Q3 2002 103 Q3 2002 100 Q3 2002 103
Q4 2002 116 Q4 2002 113 Q4 2002 117
Q1 2003 88-89 Q1 2003 90-93 Q1 2003 98M
Q2 2003 104-106M
.
* Nokia does not provide sell-in estimates

Some of the things that most impressed me about Nokia's Q1 and guidance forward:

• In Q1, Nokia’s delivery volumes grew by 13% year-on-year vs. industry volume growth of 10%.
• Outlook in US – expect to gain market share in US and CDMA due to new products shipping in volumes, also expect new products to have positive impact on ASPs
• Outlook in China – well positioned with new organization, distribution system and superior brand; will begin selling CDMA phones in 2H 2003 (pending gov’t approval)
• Q1 2003, ASPs were essentially flat sequentially, declining by 1% - negatively impacted by depreciating dollar
• Q2 2003, ASPs outlook is stable
• Nokia 3310 – Over 100 Million Units Sold
-- Highest volume product ever in the handset industry
-- #1 volume product in Nokia product portfolio in Q1 2003
-- Demonstrates that ASPs do not tell the entire story
-- Contributed in excess of EUR 10 billion to revenue over 2.5 years while producing excellent margins
• Customer financing end of Q1 2003 was EUR 1.4 billion (down from EUR 2.0 billion at YE 2002):
• Net operating cash flow: EUR 1.4 billion
• Net cash position: EUR 10.5 billion
• Gearing: -71%
• Expect strong profitability in Nokia Mobile Phones with margins above 20% and robust positive cash flow to continue in Q2 2003.

This is, however, a caveat:

• Nokia sees two opposing drivers for ASPs in longer term:
• UP: Higher functionality products in developed markets
• DOWN: Lower end products for new subscribers in emerging markets

Slacker and Others: Feel free to add to or comment on this or catch any mistakes I may have inadvertantly made.

- Eric -



To: slacker711 who wrote (2789)4/18/2003 5:17:21 PM
From: Eric L  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9255
 
Lehman Brothers on MOT and NOK handsets (Excerpts):

On Nokia before Q1 03 (April 14):

Trends in Europe combined with some incremental share gains, perhaps offsetting somewhat more sluggish 1Q03 trends in the U.S. and Asia/China where lingering excess inventories in the period may have made the market choppy for vendors.

With respect to Europe, we highlight initial March handset data from GfK, released Friday, which suggests continued solid market trends in Europe of 9% YoY (+/-2%). This brings 1Q03 YoY growth to 11%, in line with our full year estimate for 10% growth in Europe. Friday’s GfK data also provides a broader picture around share dynamics at the major vendors in the region. February data indicated that Nokia continues to extend its share in its core European market and reached 49% share in the region during February, up from under 46% in 4Q02.

With respect to Asia, GfK data thru the end of February, estimates Chinese handset market may have risen 10%, well ahead of our flattish estimates, on a 14% rise in unit sales offset by a 4% ASP reduction. CDMA shipments were estimated to have declined 15% sequentially in February after the Chinese New Year Vs a 6% decline for GSM reflecting the lower subsidies at China Unicom. Overall GfK estimates local vendors have now climbed to around 35% of the market, suggesting that while market growth may remain decent in China, market conditions are increasingly competitive and could potentially have impacted leading vendors this period. We also note GfK’s retail point of sale data does not reflect inventory levels in the region, and we continue to remain a bit cautious around near-term inventory trends.

Tim Luke, Stuart Jeffrey, and team on Motorola after Q1 03 (April 16):

In the handset area, MOT lowered its expectation for the market to 430 million vs 430 to 440 previously. MOT estimated the 1Q03 sell in market at 86 to 88 million phones and the sell through of 90 to 93 million. Our sell through estimate had been 96 million. MOT confirmed it lost 2 to 3 points of market share in China to local vendors given the fierce competitive environment in China. Some excess inventory persists in China. Motorola estimates Asian inventories at 11 to 12 weeks – we believe China is likely higher than that. MOT believes its own inventories remain at 6 to 8 weeks, including China. MOT's ASPs remain under pressure, dropping 5% sequentially to $148. We believe that management's expectation of only 5% declines for the full year could prove elusive. In general, our estimates for MOT's handset revenues are now lowered with the slightly weaker ASPs and unit shipments and our prior operating margin targets for MOT of around 8.2% are now being trimmed slightly to 7-8%.

HANDSETS: Revenues & Margins Slightly Weaker Than Anticipated on Tough Pricing Environment -- Revenues in the PCS division of $2.4B (-27.4% QoQ) were slightly lower than our $2.5B (-25% QoQ) estimate on a weaker than expected pricing decline. ASPs in the period fell to $148 (-3% QoQ) from $152 in 4Q02 and $169 in 1Q02 largely reflective of what seems to be an increasingly competitive environment, particularly in China as local vendors look to gain market share, as well as a broader mix shift in the period to the low end. Units in the period, however, remained broadly on track at 16.7M Vs our 17M estimate, tracking broadly in line with 1Q03 seasonality of -20 to -25% QoQ. Margins in the period were 4.4%, below our expectations of around 6% on more subdued revenue levels in the period. Book to Bill however in the division trended above 1, for the first time since Motorola introduced its JIT inventory management system last year.

MOT Maintains Market Share Intact; Some Concerns May Linger Around Momentum Moving Into 2Q: Motorola suggests that in light of a difficult environment, the vendor has maintained its leading position in China and has increasingly secured a leading position in the U.S. In 1Q03, Motorola maintains global market share at 19%, flat with 4Q02 and up from 16% in 1Q02. MOT maintains 12% market share in broader Asia in 1Q, down from 1Q02 and 4Q02 on a 2-3% share decline in China to local vendors. In general, MOT expects the competitive environment in China to remain fierce.

In Europe, MOT estimates its 1Q03 share positioning at 11%. We believe Motorola may be including Turkey and Russia in its estimates as our data from GfK suggests that Motorola has 8-9% share in Europe excluding these regions. MOT believes it has captured a #1 position in both the U.S. and Canada in the period. More specifically in China, while Motorola acknowledges some share loss during the quarter to local vendors, MOT maintains its position in the region by at least 5% points above the nearest competitor, Nokia. In the GSM arena, Motorola highlighted the C350 (color, low-tier) and A388c (color, Chinese handwriting recognition, mid-tier) platforms which are currently shipping to Asia and Europe, and are expected in North America in 2Q. Given increasingly more aggressive pressure from local vendors, Motorola is now accelerating the release of several new products in China. Three new products were introduced in 1Q, two additional phones will be introduced in 2Q and up to nine new phones are to be introduced in 3Q. Motorola is also boosting R&D in the region and placing increased focus on its distribution channels as it moves to continue to maximize efficiency and expand into tier 3 and tier 4 provinces. In the U.S., Motorola now claims to hold the leading market share position. Management anticipates good momentum in 2H03 with new CDMA platforms. MOT highlights the new V810 (CDMA 1X, color, camera, BREW) as well as the new E310 (CDMA 1X, color, camera attachment, BREW) platforms, in particular.

Competitive Dynamics In China, Inventories In Asia & Few New Products In 2Q May Weigh On June Outlook In general, we consider Motorola's 1Q performance to be fairly modest, although perhaps better than some investor expectations. We remain cautious moving into 2Q03 as Nokia and Samsung are set to launch new GSM, TDMA and CDMA platforms and local vendors in China remain focused on gaining market share. Many of Motorola’s suite of new platforms are set for launch in 2H03. We also believe the inventory situation in Asia, particularly China, may continue to weigh on near-term upside for MOT in 2Q. On the conference call this am, MOT suggested inventories in Asia are currently trending at 11-12 weeks and slightly higher than inventory levels in China. MOT maintains its inventory across broader APAC, while trending at broadly normalized levels of around 6-8 weeks is trending a bit higher than this average in China. Motorola suggested that the improvement in inventory balances in China was modest in 1Q03. Inventories in the China region, seem to be trending above more normalized levels in both GSM and CDMA. Outside of the APAC region, inventories seem to be at more normalized levels.

ASP Guidance Formally Moves To Lower End of Down 0-5% in 2003; Volumes Remain Key To Margin Upside Largely reflective of a mix shift to lower end platforms, combined with a tough pricing environment in China, and perhaps a new product portfolio largely leveraged to 2H, Motorola officially lowered ASP guidance to the lower end of its down 0-5% range for 2003. ASPs in 2Q are expected to trend flattish QoQ before ticking up in 2H03. Management suggested that a soon to be completed new inventory management process with Nextel, should help volumes in this higher margin, higher ASP phone group to improve to a more normalized 2.1-2.2M quarterly run rate. In the past 2 quarters, as MOT has worked with Nextel in this new inventory management process, shipments to Nextel have fallen to levels of around 1.8-1.9M units. We currently estimate PCS margins to trend slightly higher in 2Q QoQ on better volumes & growing incorporation of new, more efficient i250 GSM/GPRS core platforms. We estimate margins at 7% in 2Q. For 2003, our margins move to 7.8% Vs 7.2% in 2002.

Motorola Suggests 1Q03 Handset Market Sell-Thru 90-93M Units, At Low End of Expectations; 2003 Outlook Lowered In the handset area MOT lowered its expectation for the market to 430 million in 2003 Vs 430 to 440 M previously. Motorola suggested the 1Q03 handset market (sell-through) reached 90-93M units, at the low end or slightly below its expectation of 90-95M units and our expectation of 96M units. Nokia has previously suggested a market size of 92-96M units. In terms of sell-in, Motorola estimates the market at 86-88M, as the industry worked through some lingering excess inventories largely in Asia. While Motorola does not officially break out unit shipments by technology in PCS, they do provide some directional color. In general, we estimate unit shipments by technology tracked broadly in line with expectations. On a sequential basis, GSM/GPRS shipments seem to have fallen around 25-30% QoQ broadly in line to slightly lower than the broader group declines of -25% largely on weak China and some share loss in Europe. TDMA shipments fell slightly more than the group average following a strong 4Q sequential uptick, perhaps around 40% QoQ, but nearly tripled YoY on the availability of new low-end products for L.A. (absent in 1Q02). We estimate CDMA shipments fell 16% QoQ, perhaps reflecting a near-term slowdown in the CDMA market in China offset by seemingly good trends in the U.S. at Verizon. iDEN unit shipments rose modestly (+3% QoQ) off of a lower 4Q02 base, as MOT works with Nextel under a new inventory management process.

Tim Luke, Stuart Jeffrey, and team, on Motorola after Q1 03 (April 17):

Nokia Mobile Phone sales of EUR 5.5B were slightly below our estimate given a slight shortfall in both units (37.6M vs. 38M) and ASPs (EUR 146 vs. EUR 147). Phone margins were strong at 23.9%. European shipments were strong in the quarter, balanced as previewed by weaker sales in the US and Asia. We now believe Nokia’s new phone portfolio may help its outlook for 2Q03 and 2H03 in both the US and China, with Europe likely to see ongoing share gains. Nokia’s new 2Q03 revenue guidance is for the phone unit to post a 4-11% year over year increase, slightly below our prior estimate of an 11% increase. Nokia expects company revenues to increase somewhat less than this. Nokia’s 2Q03 EPS guidance is for EUR 0.18-0.22, excluding a EUR 0.05-0.06 charge for restructuring in its handset business. Our prior estimate was EUR 0.18. Following these results, we are trimming our 2003 sales estimate to reflect lower infrastructure sales and lower ASPs, but raising our 2003 EPS estimate on the strength of Nokia’s phone margins. Our new estimates are EUR 30.4B (up 1% YoY) in sales and EPS of EUR 0.82/$0.88. We were previously looking for sales of EUR 31.3B and EPS EUR 0.79/$0.88. We have lowered our 2004 sales estimate to EUR 31.9 billion from EUR 32.9 billion. Our 2004 EPS estimates increase, in part on the strength of restructuring in the Networks unit. We now expect Nokia to deliver EPS of EUR 0.89/$0.95, up from EUR 0.88/$0.91. Fluctuating exchange rates have helped our US dollar estimates. Our price target remains $17, or 20x our 2003 EPS estimate of $0.88. Our rating remains 2 EW.

HANDSETS 1Q03 Revenues Slightly Below Our Estimate on Impact of Currency on ASPs: Margins Above Expectations Nokia's Mobile Phones unit performed modestly below revenue expectations in the quarter. Sales were EUR 5.48 billion, versus our estimate of EUR 5.54 billion. Nokia's unit shipments of approximately 37.6 million were slightly below with our estimate. Nokia appears to have seen solid share gains and decent volumes in Europe, balanced by slower trends in Asia and a challenging US market. The company's ASPs declined slightly to EUR 146 from EUR 147. We had expected flat ASPs following Nokia's mid quarter update. Nokia noted that ASPs were flat in its core European market, down in the APAC region, and flat in North America. However, North American ASPs would have increased in the quarter if not for the decline in the dollar as Nokia's product mix shifted higher. Nokia's operating margin in the quarter, however, performed above our expectations. Nokia posted a 23.9% margin in its phones unit, better than our 23.5% estimate. We believe that strong price declines in components and new model launches are likely to have driven this strong performance. We now expect Nokia’s phone margins to be 23.4% this year, up from our prior estimate of 23.2. Outlook for Stable ASPs Off Lower Base Through 2003 on Color, MMS; Our ASP Estimates Move Lower Nokia expects ASPs to remain stable at this lower level of EUR 146 in 2Q03 and through 2003 as color and MMS models increase as a percent of their portfolio. Management noted the 3510i, launched late in 4Q02, is now the company's second best selling model behind the 3310i. Now that the 3650 is shipping globally, we expect the company to advertise the model aggressively during 2Q03. Nokia expects to ship 50-100 million color MMS models this year. We expect them to ship 169 million units in total this year, with an average ASP of EUR 146. We had previously modeled a slight uptick in ASPs in 2H03.

Management Provides 98M 1Q Market Figure, Suggests Market On Track for 440M Units: Nokia provided a global market sell through figure of 98 million units, up approximately 10% from 1Q03. Our estimate had been 96 million. We note that Motorola yesterday provided a sell through estimate of 90-93 million units. Both companies agreed that the sell in figure was slightly lower as inventory balances corrected, particularly in the US and in China. Nokia now believes the inventory position in the US and Europe is healthy, although the company does recognize lingering excess inventories in China. Market Share of 38% May Increase in 2Q03 and 2003, Helped by Gains in North America and CDMA Progress. Nokia claimed 38% market share in the quarter, down from 39% in 4Q02. We had anticipated some decline in share given that 4Q is traditionally a heavy promotional quarter from Nokia.

While Nokia noted that it has taken steps to solidify its market position in China, we believe Nokia's share may have eased slightly in the quarter. Motorola suggested that its share slipped 2-3%, citing domestic vendors as the primary driver behind the loss. We expect Nokia's market share to recover beginning in 2Q03.

We believe that the company is planning to launch a series of new products to the US market to refresh what has been a fairly uninspiring product portfolio in recent quarters. We believe Nokia has lost share in the TDMA market, likely to the popular V60 model from Motorola. Nokia is introducing several new TDMA models, including a color screen version. The increasing focus by TDMA carriers AT&T Wireless and Cingular on GSM may allow Nokia to bring its impressive portfolio of color GSM models to the US market.

Outside the US, we believe Nokia may be able to gain share in 2H03 with its renewed emphasis on CDMA, although we recognize that Nokia has traditionally underperformed in this market. We believe Nokia is close to shipping to both China Unicom and Reliance. It is currently shipping to Tata in India. Nokia's new platforms may help its efforts in Latin America. We do not believe Nokia is likely to benefit too much from CDMA in the US this year.

###

- Eric -



To: slacker711 who wrote (2789)4/24/2003 2:57:47 PM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 9255
 
LGE Bumps Sony Ericsson for 5th Place in Handset Sales.

Sony Ericssson and Siemens reports below:

Comparative Market Share, Margins, and ASP Exercise Updated:

Nokia saw 98 million units shipped Q1 which would shake out market share this way:

Nokia            37.6 million units   38.4%
Motorola 16.7 million units 17.0%
Samsung 13.2 million units 13.5%
Siemens 8.0 million units 8.2%
LGE 5.6 million units 5.7%
Sony Ericsson 5.4 million units 5.5%
Others 11.5 million units 11.7%


I'm guessing that when all the dust settles that Gartner, with better visibility in 6 to 8 weeks will report ~103 million units (at least and perhaps more) for the quarter which would shake out market share this way:

Nokia            37.6 million units   36.5%
Motorola 16.7 million units 16.2%
Samsung 13.2 million units 12.8%
Siemens 8.0 million units 8.2%
LGE 5.6 million units 5.4%
Sony Ericsson 5.4 million units 5.2%
Others 16.5 million units 16.0%


Q1 ASP and Margins for the Big Three, SE, and LGE:
.
             ASP          Margin
.
Nokia $159 USD 23.5% (Reported IAS NOT Pro Forma)
Motorola $148 USD 4.4%
Samsung ~$194 USD >21.0%
Siemens $136 USD 1.8%
LGE ~$157 USD ~5.7%
SEricsson ~164 USD (-)


>> Sony Ericsson Announces More Losses

24th April 2003
Reuters

news.zdnet.co.uk

Mobile phone company Sony Ericsson has made a loss in its most recent quarter, but still expects to be in the black by 2004.

Japanese-Swedish mobile phone maker Sony Ericsson widened its losses in the first quarter of 2003 on seasonally weaker sales and falling handset prices, but stuck to its target of turning profitable this year.

"The goal of becoming profitable for the full year 2003 still stands," Sony Ericsson spokeswoman Nina Eldh told Reuters.

Sony said in its fiscal year-end report on Thursday its joint venture with telecoms equipment maker Ericsson made a 113m euro (£78.1m) pre-tax loss in the January-March period.

"The first quarter result is weaker due to seasonality and higher-than-normal price pressure. We expect volumes to increase in the second quarter," Eldh said. "Profitability will gradually increase too, together with the introduction of new products."

The pre-tax result compares with a 77m euro pre-tax loss in the last quarter of 2002. It was around break-even in the year-ago quarter.

January-March sales of Sony Ericsson, the only loss-making top-five handset maker, dropped by 317m euros year-on-year to 806m euros. "Overall the result is worse than expected. They reiterate the forecast of returning to the black later this year and they have a better product portfolio, but it is a weak start of the year," one analyst said.

Sony Ericsson shipped 5.4m handsets, 400,000 fewer than in the first quarter of 2002 and down from 7.1m in the fourth quarter of 2002.

Sony Ericsson, created in October 2001 from the loss-making mobile phone units of Japan's Sony and Swedish telecoms equipment maker Ericsson, has said that it would become profitable with a market share of seven to 10 percent.

It has to fight against highly successful competitors such as Nokia, which increased its market share to 38 percent, twice as much as the next biggest, Motorola.

Eldh said Sony Ericsson's market share in the January-March period was stable at around six percent.

Nokia said its sales of mobile phones would rise four to 12 percent in the second quarter.

Korea's Samsung and Germany's Siemens are also bigger and want to expand in a market the industry sees growing 10 percent this year to 435-445m handsets.

The Sony Ericsson joint venture received 300m euros in the first quarter from its parent companies to keep it going as some of its recent phones were warmly received by consumers.

Sony Ericsson has previously said it aims to become the world's leading mobile phone maker by 2006, but admitted in February the goal could be too optimistic. <<

>> Sony Ericsson Posts 1Q Loss

CRN
April 24, 2003

Wireless phone maker Sony Ericsson said it still hopes to post a profit for 2003, despite reporting a wide first-quarter loss Thursday amid a sharp drop in sales.

Sony Ericsson lost 104 million euros ($114.1 million) in the three months ending March 31, compared with a slight profit for the same period last year. The joint venture between Ericsson and Sony isn't publicly traded.

Revenue fell 39 percent to 806 million euros ($885 million) from 1.1 billion euros a year ago.

The company said its first-quarter shipments fell by 400,000 phones to 5.4 million, which likely will intensify questions about Ericsson's commitment to the company because Ericsson is wrestling with its own problem: returning to profitability after two years of steep losses.

The joint venture has seen market share slide sharply since Sony and Ericsson merged their struggling phone operations in October 2001.

At the time, Sony and Ericsson had a combined global share of 9 percent but have since fallen to less than 6 percent. Finland's Nokia has 38 percent, followed by Motorola with 19 percent.

Ericsson has said Sony Ericsson must manage a market share of at least 7 percent to become profitable.

"This is certainly going to increase speculation that Ericsson will make an exit from Sony Ericsson," said Jussi Uskola, an analyst at Nordea Securities in Helsinki, Finland. Uskola said the steep decline in the average selling price of the company's phones since last year suggests that Ericsson's high-end P800 personal organizer hasn't sold widely outside Scandinavia.

Nina Eldh, a Sony Ericsson spokeswoman, said the company should ship more phones and increase its market share in the second quarter, which could improve its financial results. Sony Ericsson expects to get a boost from several new models this summer, including a new camera phone. <<

>> Siemens ICM and Mobile Networks Reports

[Siemens, the world's fourth-biggest mobile handset maker, said it sold eight million handsets in the quarter as the ICM mobiles division improved profit to 55 million euros from 44 million a year earlier, although sales fell 15 percent.]

Sales = $1,085 million
Units = 8 million
Margin = $2 million (1.8%)
ASP = $136

siemens.com

Siemens Information and Communication Mobile (ICM) improved its Group profit to €55 million ($60.7139 million USD) in the second quarter from €44 million in the prior-year period. Second-quarter sales were €2.329 billion ($2.57 billion USD), down 15% from €2.731 billion, and orders were €2.300 billion, down 31% from €3.325 billion. Currency effects contributed five percentage points to the decline in sales. The Mobile Phones division contributed €2 million ($2.208 million USD to Group profit, generating €983 million in sales ($1,085 USD)
on a volume of 8.0 million handsets in a seasonally slow quarter. These results reflect ongoing margin pressures in the mobile phone market compared to a year ago, partly offset by a better-performing product mix. For comparison the division sold 8.3 million units and earned €13 million on sales of €1.052 billion in the same quarter a year earlier.

Market conditions were particularly challenging at the Mobile Networks division, where earnings of €44 million on sales of €1.067 billion included a net positive effect of €66 million related primarily to a reduction in customer financing exposure. For comparison, the division’s earnings a year earlier were €33 million. The Cordless Products and Wireless Modules divisions again contributed to Group profit. Anticipating further volume erosion in the second half of the year, particularly at Mobile Networks, ICM is intensifying its “Top-on-Air” productivity program. <<

- Eric -



To: slacker711 who wrote (2789)5/12/2003 3:05:12 PM
From: Eric L  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9255
 
EMC on T-Mobile USA Messaging

>> T-Mobile Seeks to Use International Standing and First-To-Market Capability to Make Its Mark in Messaging

EMC Cellular
May 12, 2003

e-searchwireless.com

T-Mobile USA is the fifth largest operator in the USA and had just under ten million subscribers at the end of 2002. It is one of the USA's major GSM operators and all of its subscribers, 14% of whom are on prepaid services, use the technology. T-Mobile USA was formally known as VoiceSteam but the operation was re-branded in 2002 after Deutsche Telekom completed the acquisition of VoiceStream in June 2001. T-Mobile USA is now a subsidiary of T-Mobile International and is part of the T-Mobile group, which also holds properties in Germany, the UK, the Netherlands and Austria.

T-Mobile USA has offered SMS to its subscribers since 1999 and the its launch of both MMS (November 2002) and video messaging (March 2003) have established it as a market leader in the messaging arena. Its agreement with manufacturer Danger, which led it to bring the Sidekick device to market in October 2002, also enhanced its reputation.

The operator markets text messaging as 'an easy, fun and inexpensive way to stay in touch with your friends when you are on the go'. The emphasis is on the ability to communicate wherever you are, SMS' capability as a two-way messaging tool and its pricing. SMSC's are provided by CMG and Comverse, while the operator's MMSC is provided by Ericsson.

Consumer Messaging

T-Mobile USA initially promoted SMS as a tool for sending peer-to-peer messages. The approach has now evolved and through its 'My T-Mobile' portal, T-Mobile USA offers its subscribers access to a variety of services including instant messaging and SMS alerts. A wide range of content is provided through the t-zones mobile data portal. Instant messaging is provided by AOL Instant Messenger, with T-Mobile USA stressing how the experience of using it is similar to instant messaging from a desktop. In those cases where subscribers want access to instant messaging on their handset, T-Mobile USA encourages them to purchase a Samsung R225m () or a Nokia 3390 (). T-Mobile USA's Alerts service is a push information offering provided across the market. It allows subscribers to select the material they wish to be sent and also allows them to specify when this data should arrive on their handsets. Over 30 topics are included in the Alerts, including such subjects as:

Weather
Sport
Health
Politics
Music
Movies
Horoscopes
Jokes
TV

T-Mobile USA subscribers are able to access an internet based backing for their messaging applications. The T-Mobile USA website, My T-Mobile.com, allows subscribers to send an SMS from the company's homepage, while the communication section of the site allows subscribers to configure such facilities as the Alerts service. Configuration of T-Mobile USA's email service is also available on the website, with subscribers able to change their handset's email address. Emails can normally be sent to and from a handset using the subscriber's phone number (number@tmomail.net).

In an attempt to increase the SMS traffic handled over its network, T-Mobile USA has involved itself with Nashville Star, a Country & Western show which began in March 2003 and is in the same mould as American Idol. Through this initiative subscribers from seven operators, including T-Mobile USA, are able to vote for their favourite contestants on a weekly basis. The initiative involves the use of a universal short code between the seven operators which is something T-Mobile USA hopes will improve the popularity of messaging even further.

The latest innovation to be offered to T-Mobile USA subscribers is video messaging. Subscribers wishing to use the service must sign up to t-zones, the operator's data and content portal. The service is available over the Nokia 3650 , which is retailing for USD 300 with a USD 100 rebate. This handset allows video to be recorded at 10 frames per second and plays back at 15 frames per second. T-Mobile USA has worked with Nokia to ensure that the video includes sound (Cingular Wireless is also selling the Nokia 3650 but its offering does not include the sound component). Video content can be sent to other handsets or to desktops via email. T-Mobile USA is the first operator to bring video messaging to the market in the Americas and is using video messaging as a differentiator between it and the other operators in the market.

T-Mobile USA launched North America's first MMS service in November 2002. Subscribers who are interested in this service need to sign up to one of the operator's t-zones tariff plans, which range from USD 2.99 per month for 1MB of data to USD 10 per month for 10MB. T-Mobile USA reported that 1MB equates to approximately 25 picture messages. MMS messages can only be sent to another t-zone subscriber's handset or to an email address - MMS cannot be sent to any other handset simply by keying in that handset's phone number. The MMS service is branded 'picture messaging' and is available over the Sony Ericsson T300 () and the Motorola T720i (). Retail prices for the two handsets are USD 99.99 and USD 199.99 respectively (both prices are after rebate). The Motorola T720i camera attachment is offered free with mailed rebates.

Corporate Messaging

T-Mobile USA's corporate services have been spearheaded by its provision of the Sidekick device. Through a partnership with the vendor Danger, T-Mobile USA was able to bring this device to market in October 2002. The Sidekick offers access to SMS, email and instant messaging, as well as traditional voice calls and wireless internet surfing. Though Sidekick's impact has since lessened, Danger is planning to bring a GSM tri-mode, MMS-enabled version to market in 2003. Future plans also include an integrated camera and support for CDMA. Other devices offered to T-Mobile's corporate subscribers include the blackberry, primarily for wireless email, and the T-Mobile MDA (Mobile Data Assistant), which also offers wireless email.

As for consumers, support for corporate customers is provided over the internet through a mobile access portal, which is particularly targeted at SMEs. T-Mobile USA's corporate messaging is broadly very similar to that offered to consumers, including such services as SMS and wireless email - the obvious differences are the costs and inclusive minutes to be found in the tariff plans.

T-Mobile USA splits its business subscriber base into two groups: retail & business and corporate, with the operator offering different tariff plans for each segment. An example of a typical plan available to business subscribers includes 1,500 whenever minutes, unlimited SMS and unlimited wireless internet access costing USD 99 per month.

Pricing

Subscribers have a choice of three payment methods for SMS. Regardless of which method they choose, the first 50 incoming SMS are free. Over and above this subscribers have to pay for both incoming and outgoing SMS. This can be done on a per message basis under which all text messages cost USD 0.05. Alternatively subscribers also have the option of paying USD 2.99 per month for 500 SMS per month. This equates to USD 0.006 per message, a considerable saving and one that suggests T-Mobile USA is attempting to encourage heavy usage of the service by pricing it as a competitive option to free local fixed calls and PC-based instant messaging. This monthly SMS quota includes instant messages and alerts. There is also an option to pay USD 10 a month for unlimited SMS and unlimited calls to other T-Mobile subscribers. However, this last option is not available in all cases.

T-Mobile USA SMS Tariffs

Tariff SMS Monthly Equivalent Additional
Included Rate Price per SMS SMS

Pay per use - 0 0.05 -
500 SMS 500 2.99 0.01 0.05
Unlimited SMS Unlimited 10.00 - -

Source: T-Mobile USA, rates in USD dollars.

Instant messaging costs the same as normal SMS, logging into the service costs the same as sending one SMS. The T-Mobile video service costs USD 2.99 per month, which includes approximately 10 video messages or 30 still photos. Messages sent over this limit will cost USD 0.30 each. Voice services are charged separately. The MMS service requires a monthly payment of between USD 2.99 and USD 10.00.

Company Strategy

T-Mobile USA's strategy is based on two major points. One is the operator's international presence; the second is being the first operator in the USA to offer such services as MMS and video messaging.

T-Mobile has been keen to promote the ability of its subscribers to roam on its networks in Europe and North America using voice and SMS services. The universality of t-zones and the cross-network branding are part of the company's strategy of creating a transatlantic operator. The transition from VoiceStream to T-Mobile USA has been successfully carried out and the operator is now pushing its range of branded services to the US population.

The promotion of MMS and video messaging, among other things, has reinforced and helped push the new brands. Though other operators in North America offer a picture messaging service that allows images to be sent to email addresses, T-Mobile USA was the first to launch MMS, allowing images to be sent between handsets. Being first, as it also was with video messaging, is an important step in the company's aim of enhancing its reputation in the market.

Like other operators, T-Mobile USA has signed a range of content deals and has identified the opportunities behind TV and SMS voting. It is through such market awareness that T-Mobile USA has managed to increase its messaging traffic. The amount of text messages handled by T-Mobile USA during 2002 exceeded 1,600 million. Its traffic levels are more in less in line with those of Cingular Wireless, the largest operator in the USA, though both of these fall behind AT&T Wireless in terms of the total number of messages handled. SMS traffic levels at T-Mobile USA were approximately 200 million in Q1 2002 and rose steadily through the year. The operator also reported that over one million MMS were sent over its network during Q1 2003, indicating that its picture messaging service had gained a substantial level of popularity. <<

- Eric -