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The operators continue to grow their service
base, because they have much greater technical
and creative control over their service than
their cable competition. By 2014, Europe will
have 45 per cent of the global market, Asia
31 per cent, North America 19 per cent and
the rest of the world about 5 per cent.
High
Arpus still favour Europe and the US. Of
the specific CapEx items tracked by the
report, expenditures will grow from $3.1
billion in 2010 to $5.1 billion in 2014,
while service revenue will grow from $17.5
billion to $46 billion in 2014.
Over 50 companies are profiled in the report,
including many emerging markets in Eastern
Europe and the rest of the world. Despite
many obstacles and competition, 23 IPTV
SPs (mostly in Asia and Europe) will have
exceeded the million-subscriber mark by
2014. For many IPTV operators, set-top boxes
make up over 70 per cent of CapEx expenditures.
Greater
penetration of integrated hybrid, IPTV,
and OTT STBs including connected TVs with
STBs embedded in TV sets is expected.
In
the North American markets, all eyes have
recently turned to Verizon and AT&T,
each adding about one million subscribers
in 2009. Since Verizon stopped signing new
franchise agreements outside its existing
footprint, speculation is growing that Verizon
will switch from its QAM/IPTV architecture
to an all IPTV (fiber-based) architecture
for future franchises after 2010.
Meanwhile AT&T, with no such technical
constraints, is free to use a discreet
upgrade approach to growing bandwidth
by using a mix of advanced DSL or FTTX as
needed.
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