Broadband in the UK still ahead of forecast
August 5th, 2008 Leave a comment Visited 26 times, 1 so far today
Contrary to the claims made by some of the leading ISPs, Point Topic believes that the UK broadband market is holding up well in the face of the slowdown, so far at least.
With BTs numbers published last week it is possible to make a reliable estimate of the total number of broadband lines in the UK at the end of June. At 16,735,000 the figure is actually a clear 225,000, or 1.3%, ahead of Point Topics forecast made in November last year.
Our November forecast was based on the markets historic performance and took no special account of changing economic conditions. But it did predict a sharp reduction in broadband growth, from 2.9m in the year to mid-2007 to only 2.0m. (The actual was 2.2 million.)
“The reasons for the drop are simple,” says Tim Johnson, Chief Analyst at Point Topic,”the number of dial-up homes ripe for migration to broadband is rapidly dwindling, there are barely a million of them left now and they are an increasingly resistant minority.”
“At the same time, the ISPs are making only slow progress in winning over the 9.6 million households which are still without internet access at all. The fall in broadband adds was entirely predictable on the basis of these trends, and in fact sales have been slightly better than historic performance suggested.”
“It is understandable that an ISP CEO should blame his shrinking broadband numbers on the economy rather than lack of foresight or declining market share. Its his job to put the best face on things. But it gives a misleading impression of how well the broadband business is doing,” continues Johnson.
In fact the growth in the percentage of households with internet access has been quite good by recent standards up 4.3% to 62.9% in the year to the end of June. That compares with only 2.6% growth in the previous year. Point Topic estimates the current household breadown as 58.4% on broadband, 4.5% on dial-up and 37.1% still no-net.
Whether this will continue is another matter.
“The pattern of declining quarterly adds has been clear for several years, it has been fairly consistent year-on-year with Q2 usually being the worst quarter, but expenditure on broadband is clearly a vulnerable part of the household budget. The next test in 2008 will be how well Q3 bounces back from the Q2 trough,” Johnson concludes.
Figure 1: Broadband lines added in the UK
Quarter Net broadband adds
Q4 2005 984,400
Q1 2006 1,026,000
Q2 2006 619,000
Q3 2006 660,600
Q4 2006 834,700
Q1 2007 886,800
Q2 2007 509,500
Q3 2007 595,200
Q4 2007 620,800
Q1 2008 589,400
Q2 2008 416,700
***END***
For more information and associated charts and tables, please contact:
Point Topic: Oliver Johnson
Email: oliver {at} point-topic(.)com
Tel. +44 (0) 20 3301 3303
About Point Topic
Point Topic is an analyst company focusing entirely on broadband. Point Topics international services have a global reputation for providing the most up-to-date and authoritative user statistics, supplier profiles and applications reports on DSL, FTTx, cable and other broadband services worldwide.
Point Topic, reg. in England 3503830. 61 Grays Inn Road, London WC1X 8TL.
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