Verizon CEO disputes DSL seasonality
By Ed Gubbins
Despite anticipation among many in the telecom industry of a seasonal uptic in
third-quarter DSL penetration, Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg today aimed to dispel
the notion of seasonal trends in broadband sales.
At a Goldman Sachs investor conference today, Seidenberg was asked about
possible saturation of the U.S. broadband market and whether DSL subscriber
growth might rebound in the third quarter, following a historical pattern.
“My operating people like to use seasonality as an excuse as to why numbers go
down,” Seidenberg said. “There is no seasonality with respect to the market’s
acceptance of innovation.”
“Is DSL hitting the point where we’re getting more penetrated, and it’s less
effective?” he said. “Of course.”
But with nationwide DSL penetration between 50% and 55% and the penetration of
high-definition television at only 20%, Seidenberg said, there’s plenty of room
for further broadband gains.
Verizon’s net DSL additions dropped 64% in the second quarter, according to
research analysis firm Broadband Trends, and the carrier’s total net broadband
additions (including DSL and fiber-to-the-home) dropped 31%. In a report
published last month, Broadband Trends principal analyst Teresa Mastrangelo
attributed the declines to seasonality, citing less precipitous drops in the
second quarters of 2006 and 2005.
|
broadbandtrends.com is a service of The Windsor Oaks Group LLC. We are an independent market research and consulting firm specializing in the coverage of broadband infrastructure and services. [Home] [Contact Us] [Send Us Your News] [Terms of Service] Send mail to
webmaster@broadbandtrends.com with
questions or comments about this web site.
|