https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL2203/S00055/download-weekly-cell-towers-on-the-block.htm
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Download Weekly: Cell towers on the block |
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Vodafone says it is preparing to spin out its cell tower
network, Spark announced similar plans a month ago. Why is
this happening?
Spark took the wraps off its plans to establish Spark TowerCo when it announced its half year result in February.
At the time Spark New Zealand Chair Justine Smyth said: "…in the second half Spark intends to establish Spark TowerCo to improve the utilisation and capital efficiency of its passive mobile assets and open up opportunities to introduce third-party capital.”
Spark CEO Jolie Hodson says establishing a TowerCo would “…improve the performance, utilisation, and capital efficiency of its passive mobile assets”.
This week Vodafone announced a similar plan. The company’s part owner Infratil told investors last month plans for a tower spin-off were at an advanced stage.
On Monday Vodafone
said it has engaged Barrenjoey and UBS to advise the company
on a sale. The company’s press release mentions the
possibility of using shared
infrastructure.
The logic is straight-forward. In the fibre era, mobile phone towers represent the bulk of a telco’s capital investment.
Towers can account for a large slice of operating costs. Spinning them off and renting them from tower companies and, in some cases, from rival operators or the tower companies set up by rival operators, can cut costs.
More importantly, these deals can boost margins. That looks like delivering better value for shareholders.
The move can be a step on the path to shared infrastructure. This was controversial at one time but the success of the Rural Connectivity Group which builds shared mobile infrastructure for the three mobile companies has removed any fear from not owning towers.
While mobile
operators might not want to share wholly-owned
infrastructure with rivals, that is not going to worry a
tower operator. Indeed, they will woo potential
business.
There’s another angle to consider. Over time higher frequency spectrum will become available for 5G networks. Higher frequencies require greater tower density, that means more towers. A lot more towers. Getting that cost off the telco balance sheet and establishing shared infrastructure now will make that a less daunting proposition for mobile company shareholders.
European mobile companies have raised billions of dollars selling their towers. There are plenty of willing buyers with large businesses building up international tower portfolios. It’s an attractive proposition for them because they have guaranteed long term tenants.
The deal will see RNZ remain commercial free. TVNZ will stay commercial but would no longer pay a dividend to the government. It appears the merged business will be a not-for-profit operation.
Samsung remains top brand with 19 percent market share. Apple remains in second place head of Xiaomi, Oppo and Vivo in that order. The remaining companies accounted for 32 percent of all units shipped. Their share continues to fall, last year they represented 40 percent of the market.
Rival research company IDC has similar numbers for the brands while putting the market increase at 5.7 percent.
Dell’Oro Group says the worldwide SD-Wan market grew 35 percent in 2021 as enterprise customers optimised networks for cloud services. It hit revenues of over US$2 billion. Cisco is the market leader with Fortinet in second place, VMware, Versa and HPE are the other top five brands.
At Reseller News Rob O’Neill reports on boom times for New Zealand’s tech sector. Stats NZ says sales of software and services are up 39 percent over the last two years.
Download Weekly: Cell towers on the
block was first posted at
billbennett.co.nz.
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