With some 3.6 billion people across Asia
using mobile phones – around 52% of the number of mobile subscribers in the
world – spread across a diverse range of markets, the region is already rapidly
advancing in its exploiting of mobile data/wireless broadband services.
Growth across Asia in high speed access
to the internet by mobile wireless has been largely driven by highly
competitive markets combined with preparedness to embrace new generation mobile
technologies. With 3G and 3G+ platforms extensively covering the region, mobile
broadband services are already well established. The rapid take up has been
underpinned by increasingly cheaper smartphone prices and lower airtime tariffs
combining to support even wider adoption. And now, of course, we have 4G/LTE
providing a fresh impetus, especially in the region’s pace-setting markets. By
end-2014 mobile broadband subscriptions in Asia totalled just over 0.9 million
– about 40% of all the mobile broadband subscribers in the world.
The more highly developed markets in the
region, such as Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore and Taiwan, have
positioned themselves well to generally exploit mobile data and broadband
wireless opportunities and lead the rest of the region into the next
generations of mobile applications. As 3G transitions through 3.5G and onto
4G/LTE and we see consequential increases in speeds, as service improves, as
content providers offer more services, and over-the-top (OTT) services gain
greater traction, an exponential growth in data usage is occurring in the major
markets. Hong Kong is a prime example of this explosion in mobile data.
While 3G licensing and the ongoing
launch of 3G services in Asia has certainly provided the fundamental platform
for growth in wireless data services, 3G has also been providing opportunities
for both wireless access and content providers in domestic markets. In South
Asia, in particular, more people own a mobile phone than a PC, giving the
delivery of mobile data services huge potential there. Although one can
obviously say that in terms of system sophistication ‘the show has moved on’ in
the more advanced markets, 3G is continuing to provide the basis for ongoing
development of mobile data across much of the region.
It should also be noted that mobile data
is by no means a new phenomenon in the region. An example of the early
widespread adoption of a particular mobile data service in Asia was the Short
Message Service (SMS). SMS became very popular throughout Asia ahead of the
wider market, with remarkable growth being experienced in particular in the
Philippines and Malaysia, as well as in China.
The business plans of the majority of
mobile operators have been built on the assumption that the key to further
revenue growth lies not just in accumulating more and more subscribers, but in
the ability to offer more Value-Added Services (VAS) and, most importantly,
efficient and effective access to the internet. This in turn allows the
operators to pursue higher ARPUs based on offering genuinely greater value
added services plus improved quality to customers.
Another early move into mobile data
within Asia was Japan’s NTT DoCoMo launching its i-Mode service and its two
rivals –SoftBank and KDDI – following with the launch of their own versions of
i-Mode. The result was dramatically successful as an early push into largescale
mobile data services; at its peak over 80% of mobile subscribers in Japan were
logging on from a mobile using one of these platforms.
More recent mobile data development in
Asia has essentially been built on the 3G and 3G+, now 4G/LTE technology. As a
consequence, right across Asia, with the transition to a range of new
generation mobile platforms, there has been a major shift from mobile voice to
mobile data.
A good example of the way in which next
generation networks have been progressively reshaping the mobile markets across
the region can be found in Singapore. By August 2014 the number of mobile
subscribers stood at 8.2 million for a penetration of 152%; most significantly,
of these subscribers 7.9 million were signed up to 3G or 4G services. That
meant that just the 3G and 4G subscribers combined represented a population
penetration already well in excess of 100% by that stage. In other words,
Singapore had far more mobile broadband subscriptions than population.
Importantly, 4G/LTE already has a
significant presence in the Singapore market. The three mobile operators all
launched a form of 4G in 2012 and have since been rapidly expanding their
coverage at a rate that effectively saw a full national presence by end-2013.
Regionally, overall mobile broadband
penetration was around 23% by early 2015. This represented a total of 920
million mobile broadband subscribers across the region. The number of mobile
broadband subscribers was growing at around 25% annually.
In the context of mobile broadband
services, we should not ignore the WiMAX platform. Whilst there has been some
activity in the providing of fixed WiMAX networks, the real test has been the
advent of mobile WiMAX. The roll-out of WiMAX-based mobile services in Asia has
begun; however, significant rollouts have been limited to just a few markets.
The technology is looking more and more like a platform suited for niche
markets. Pakistan, Bangladesh and Malaysia have notable WiMAX roll outs.
Key operators in the region have been
investing heavily in WiFi and the deployment of femtocells for mobile network
offload. South Korea for example, saw an 11-fold jump in mobile data traffic
over a one year period and WiFi traffic accounted for a third of all mobile
traffic.
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