Title: AsiaPacific
1Asia-Pacific Latin American Traffic Trends
and ForecastsXXV Reunion Iberoamericana de
Tráfico Internacional - AHCIETTim Stronge,
TeleGeographyApril 29, 2009
2Presentation Outline
- International Voice
- International long distance trends
- Role of VoIP
- International Bandwidth Supply and Demand
- Demand growth in Latin America and Asia
- Who connects to whom?
- A new construction boom
- International Prices Revenue
- Wholesale bandwidth price trends
- Revenuesgoing up?!
3TeleGeography Research
4(No Transcript)
5International Voice and VoIP Trends
6Growth Has Moderated...
Notes Data for 2008 are projections based on
half-year results
7Fastest Growing Destinations, 2002-2007
8Top Ten Wholesale Destinations
9Wholesale Traffic Revenues by Region, 2007
10Total TDM, VoIP and Skype Traffic, 2008
Note Total traffic reflects TDM, VoIP, and
Skypes international PC-to-PC traffic.
11Bandwidth Demand
12The Internet Drives Bandwidth Demand
Share of Used International Bandwidth
13Global Internet Backbones AddingCapacity Rapidly
International Internet Bandwidth Growth, 2002-2008
14Extremely Rapid Traffic Growth in Developing
Markets, though still Strong Everywhere
Average and Peak International Internet Traffic
by Region, 2005-2008 CAGR
Notes Data reflect the growth of average and
peak traffic on Internet links connected across
international borders including links between
countries in each region. Data is the compound
annual growth rate between mid-2005 and mid-2008.
15Worldwide Broadband Subscribers by Technology
16L. America Broadband Markets - Future Growth
17Internet Traffic by Application, 2008
Web, P2P, and streaming traffic account for 78,
the majority of which is video
Notes Data based on the average shares by
application reported by carriers surveyed by
TeleGeography in mid-2008. Web includes
HTTP-based streaming audio/video. Streaming is
only non-HTTP streaming audio/video Source
TeleGeography Research
18Factors Driving Demand Growth
- Broadband subscriber growth
- Increasing broadband access speeds
- Illicit P2P usage
- Skyrocketing growth in legal video content
- Growth in cloud based services
19Geography of Bandwidth Demand
20U.S. Remains a Major Internet Hub
21Miami The Telecom Capital of Latin America
22Reliance on the U.S. is Slowly Waning
International Internet Backbone Connections (
Share of Capacity)
23U.S. Still an Asian Hub
24Bandwidth Supply
25Subsea Capacity is Soaring Due toUpgrades and
New Cables
Lit Submarine Capacity by Route, 2002-2008
Notes Data reflect lit capacity in unprotected
terms at the end of the respective year.
Intra-Asia capacity includes cables with landings
in both Hong Kong and Japan. Trans-Pacific
capacity excludes Southern Cross and Telstra
Endeavour. Trans-Atlantic capacity excludes
Atlantis-2.
26Cost of New Sub Cables Entering Service
Notes Number of new cables is based on the year
that the cable entered service. Cables entering
service between 2009 and 2011 is based on
announced contracts and TeleGeography estimates.
27Number of New Sub Cables Entering Service
Notes Number of new cables is based on the year
that the cable entered service. Cables entering
service between 2009 and 2011 is based on
announced contracts and TeleGeography estimates.
28Proposed New Cables by Region
29Proposed New Cables Caribbean
30Capacity Running Out in the Trans-Atlantic Market
Notes Potential upgradeable and lit capacity
shown in unprotected terms. Potential capacity
available on existing cables as of year-end 2008.
31and also between the U.S. and Latin America?
Notes Potential upgradeable and lit capacity
shown in unprotected terms. Potential capacity
available on existing cables as of year-end 2008.
32Subsea Route Market Concentration
Note This figure applies the Herfindahl-Hirschman
Index (HHI) calculation to lit capacity by cable
per region. The higher the number, the higher
the amount of market concentration. HHI is
affected by market share and number of
competitors.
33Bandwidth Pricing
34Median STM-1 Prices 20022008
35What does 15,000 Buy for One Month?
- 2 Mbps Johannesburg-London (E-1)
- 155 Mbps Hong Kong-Los Angeles (STM-1)
- 10,000 Mbps New York-London (wavelength)
- A new car!
36Private Line Prices Vary by Capacity
LondonNew York Unit Price by Capacity, Q4 2008
37Subsea Capacity Purchase Revenues
Note For simplicity, calculations assume that
all bandwidth sales take the form of renewable
one-year leases.
38Tim Stronge1 202 741 0040tstronge_at_telegeography
.com