Ericsson, Nokia Siemens Widen RAN Market Lead
Communications market research firm Infonetics Research reports that worldwide sales of radio access network (RAN) equipment inched up a percent to $10.2 billion in 2Q08, after market leaders Ericsson and Nokia Siemens Networks each increased their worldwide revenue by 5%, reinforcing their strong #1 and #2 leadership positions (respectively).
Infonetics' latest report shows that the slight sequential increase in worldwide RAN equipment revenue was primarily driven by strong GSM deployments in India, China, and Africa, and by W-CDMA deployments in North America. By contrast, the North American CDMA market slumped in 2Q08, down 40% sequentially.
Meanwhile, the mobile softswitching segment jumped 33% in 2Q08 to $1. 4 billion, led by huge quarterly sales increases for soft mobile switching centers (soft MSCs) and wireless media gateways, propelled by a spike in China Mobile deployments.
"The bright spots in the mobile network equipment market continue to be the mobile packet core and mobile softswitching segments, driven by service provider migration to IP-based architectures. Soft MSCs, which provide call control, signaling, and intelligence for mobile networks, are particularly hot, with worldwide licenses expected to more than double between 2007 and 2011," said Stéphane Téral, principal analyst for mobile infrastructure at Infonetics.
Other highlights from the report:
- The strong GSM market helped propel Huawei past Nortel for the #4 spot in worldwide RAN equipment revenue market share in 2Q08; Alcatel-Lucent maintains its #3 position
- The number of worldwide mobile subscribers hit 3.3 billion in 2007 and will grow to 5.2 billion by 2011
- More than ½ of all new mobile subscribers will hail from Asia Pacific by 2009
- Sales of home location registers (HLRs) (centralized databases that store mobile subscriber information and profiles) are down 1% sequentially, but up 23% year-over-year, driven by network upgrades and new network deployments
Posted to the site on 5th September 2008
