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Strategies & Market Trends : Telebras (TBH) & Brazil -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Steve Fancy who wrote (8143)9/16/1998 3:35:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 22640
 
Study: Telephony Costs Inhibiting Latin American Growth [Check out the last paragraph on 1999 100% growth rates]

internetnews.com

[September 15, 1998] A recent study of Latin American
Internet access providers found that telephone charges are the
biggest obstacle on the road to increased Internet usage in that
part of the world.

The study from International Data Corp. (IDC) was based on
interviews with Internet Service Providers (ISPs),
telecommunication service providers, and cable operators in
Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and Venezuela.
IDC said the players in these countries handle 40% of the
accounts in the Latin American market or approximately 1.2
million Internet users.

Those Internet access providers surveyed said they will spend
up to US$6.3 million each on technology in 1998, a combined
investment of more than US$390 million, according to IDC.
Personal Internet usage accounts for an estimated 60% of all
Internet access in Latin America, the study revealed.

Prohibitive telephone charges, however, have a significant impact
on the typical Latin American Web user. The average American
Netizen usually makes just one payment to an ISP for Net
access, while the Latin American user must pay for ISP
connectivity and per-minute charges to local phone companies
for every minute they are online, according to IDC.

"Despite a heterogeneous nature of the regional market, basic
telephony costs remain the single largest inhibitor to greater
growth in Internet usage in Latin America," said Annika Alford,
research manager, IDC Latin America.

"These per-minute costs have allowed cable Internet access
pushers in the regions to position themselves as low-cost
alternatives to traditional analog dial-up access," added Alford.

Since cable operators can offer users potentially higher
bandwidth and price advantages, interest in cable Internet access
is growing significantly in Latin America, IDC said. The seven
surveyed cable operators in the region predicted cable account
growth would represent the greatest increase of all the access
types, accounting for a 504% surge for the year.

The IDC study also reported that Brazil had the strongest
consumer market with approximately 79% of all accounts in the
home, while Mexico represented the lowest consumer
penetration with only 29% of total accounts from the home.

Other findings include:

Latin American Internet access providers typically had
two links to the Internet backbone in the United States
One-third of those surveyed used MCI for their
connections to the backbone in the U.S.
Sprint was the second preferred link with 26% of the
sample
Leading providers of domestic connections to the Internet
backbone were Embratel, Avantel, and ImpSat.

Overall, surveyed access providers were optimistic about
growth in 1999, the study said. The group forecasted a 90%
increase in the total number of accounts they will service next
year. Dial-up accounts are forecasted to grow 87% in 1999,
and dedicated accounts are expected to increase 124%.


Last modified: Tuesday, 15-Sep-1998 15:26:35 EDT



To: Steve Fancy who wrote (8143)9/16/1998 5:33:00 AM
From: Ganesh  Respond to of 22640
 
I heard it was SBC/ Warburg that did most of the buying yesterday.
This is, from what I can gather, an in-house position. Perhaps they know something we don't know.