Fiber-based services could solve small telco profit squeeze

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Small independent telcos are experiencing a profit squeeze, according to a new study from the Telergee Alliance, a network of seven certified public accounting firms with telecom specialties. Net income for 196 small telcos surveyed decreased a median of 22.3% in 2008, researchers found. The 2009 Telergee Benchmark Study, made available exclusively to clients of Telergee firms and to TelephonyOnline, surveyed small US telcos with total access lines ranging from fewer than 500 to more than 18,000. Although telcos experienced a median 10.7% increase in non-regulated revenues, it was not sufficient to offset the impact of a median 2.2% decrease in telcos' traditional wireline revenues and a median 2.9% increase in wireline expenses. Driving the decrease in wireline revenues was a decline in access lines, which experienced a median 3.5% decrease. Many small telcos, particularly those in rural areas, receive Universal Service funding to cover some of their network costs, and that has minimized the impact of a decline in voice lines, noted Rick Betts. Independent telcos have pursued a wide range of new business opportunities in an effort to replace lost landline revenues. Some of these ventures, including wireless, competitive local exchange carrier (CLEC) operations and traditional cable service, generate revenues but yield narrow or declining margins. The most successful non-regulated service, the Telergee study found, is Internet connectivity, which comprises a median 12.9% of respondents' total operating revenues. The long-term solution to telcos' revenue squeeze, according to sources from several Telergee firms, is to offer fiber connectivity to end users capable of supporting higher speed data and, potentially, advanced video services based on the Internet protocol (IPTV). Nearly half of telcos in the Telergee study said they plan to offer IPTV by the end of 2010, including 19.5% that offer the service today.


Fiber-based services could solve small telco profit squeeze