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Australia to see LTE uptake not until 2014

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CIOL Bureau
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MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA: A significant impact from LTE will not occur in Australia until 2014, as networks are deployed nationally in digital dividend spectrum, says Ovum.

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Also Read: WiMax and LTE: The case for 4G coexistence

Ovum believes that LTE will be deployed predominately in urban areas using the 2.5GHz and potentially other bands long prior to 2014.

However, the big impact will come once digital dividend spectrum becomes available and national LTE rollouts commence, of a then mature LTE technology. By end 2014, LTE will represent 10 percent of mobile connections in Australia.

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Nathan Burley, analyst, Ovum, says: “Demand for wireless data will continue to grow and extra capacity and lower cost per bit will be strongest drivers of LTE, rather than incremental improvements in user experience which will no doubt occur. LTE will largely be an overlay, at least initially, in high traffic areas to allow carriers to deliver more capacity to more users.

“Like 3G, we see little advantage in being the first mover with LTE. Although not it’s first 3G strategy Telstra Next G strategy demonstrates this. It deployed a mature 3G standard over three years after it was first offered by Hutchison in Australia”, adds Burley, based in Melbourne.

It is reasonable to expect LTE to mature slightly faster than 3G, however its deployment in Australia should correspond broadly to what we saw with 3G UMTS, except around seven  years later. This means around 2014 is likely to correspond to the 3G experience of 2006/2007 when the technology started rapid adopted in the mass-market.

Apart from the entry of Hutchison, in our view 3G did not have any significant impact on revenue market share of Australian operators until CY H206. Following, this 3G helped stabile ARPU, and subsequently HSPA has enabled the operators to build significant business from data.

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