Strong competition from Chinese firms is eating into profit margins at mobile
infrastructure manufacturers worldwide, according to analyst reports.
Along with a global slowdown in the rate of mobile network expansion, the
growing competition could threaten jobs at established telecoms vendors.
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Fierce competition in the market for base stations and other infrastructure
from China's two largest telecoms equipment makers,
Huawei and
ZTE, has been
eroding profit margins and market shares, say analysts at
IMS
Research.
"The market has been growing at 10 per cent or more each year, so this was
not a problem. But this is going to change with the new market conditions,"
said Matia Grossi, lead infrastructure analyst at IMS Research.
"The recent announcements [by
Nokia
Siemens,
Ericsson
and
Alcatel-Lucent]
of thousands of voluntary [redundancies] in the following years is a clear
signal of what is going on in the market."
Huawei and ZTE have often struggled to win market share in more mature
telecoms markets, but have been more successful in emerging markets which are
likely to see far more growth.
Recent announcements of thousands of voluntary redundancies is a clear signal of what is going on in the market
Matia Grossi Lead infrastructure analyst, IMS Research
"There will be regions and countries where growth is set to continue at an
incredible pace, such as India, Africa and Southeast Asia, but this is not going
to compensate for the saturation in more mature markets," Grossi added.
"The number of base stations shipped each year has basically doubled. In the
past three years, in countries where operators have already reached a good
geographical coverage, they are now relying mostly on software upgrades to
increase the capacity of their networks.
"They are relying on additional base stations or [transceivers] only if they
have no other choice."
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