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NSR reports chaos in satellite broadband ecosystem spurs growth


NSR reports chaos in satellite broadband ecosystem spurs growth

NSR’s VSAT and Broadband Satellite Markets, 18th Edition report, released today, forecasts healthy revenues in the next decade with Enterprise VSAT gaining a slight edge over Consumer Broadband, accounting for greater than 50% of total revenues. Backhaul & Trunking will be the key application globally, but broadband to households, consumers, and hotspots will account for healthy demand as well. The satellite broadband ecosystem is in its transition phase with multiple ongoing parallel developments. “Incumbents extending to new geographies, emergence of GEO/MEO/LEO HTS offerings, entry of new players, innovation in the ground segment, dropping capacity prices, new solution offerings, system upgrades, and new business models; all add to a chaotic, but game-changing, recipe where ecosystem development will lead to market growth,” according to Vivek Suresh, NSR Analyst and author of the report. On the capacity demand front, resonating with demand and the falling in-orbit asset cost per Gbps, satellite operators are launching additional capacity globally. As a result, pricing is shifting closer to USD $200/Mbps/month for HTS Ka-band and USD $300/MHz/month for wideband capacity. “Prices are likely to drop further with the influx of VHTS and non-GEO HTS platforms, during the period 2021-2023; unlocking price elasticity across different applications. With falling capacity pricing, it becomes critical for operators to invest in the right strategy for consistent growth,” states Vivek. Why is satellite broadband so attractive? For one, there is a large potential for Consumer Broadband where satellite services currently cover only 0.63% of the total addressable market. This represents a sustainable and high paced growth opportunity over the long term. However, this market segment is extremely price sensitive, and a uniform ARPU will not be applicable for service penetration across all regions. Operators and service providers will have to execute lower service fees with slim profit margins, especially in the developing regions of Latin America, Middle East/Africa, and Asia. “The key to generating higher service revenues from the Consumer Broadband segment is service scalability. The next generation of HTS, VHTS, and LEO satellites are the major market growth drivers. And, the Enterprise VSAT segment’s healthy ARPU will generate sustainable service revenue growth across multiple applications,” adds Vivek.

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