As soon as Phase 1 of the HSBB ended on December 2012, the BN government had stopped giving subsidy grants to TM therefore it is expected that fibre expansion works will slow down considerably or come to an eventual halt.
Moody's Research comments:
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As a result of the high dividend policy and commitment to return excess cash to shareholders, cash flow metrics will continue to remain inconsistent with the current A3 rating. Furthermore, further HSBB investments will be made by TMB without any government grant, and which will further pressure its cash flow metrics.
March 2013
Source: http://www.moodys.com/research/Moodys-Tele...ions--PR_267330March 2013
Those who live in cities such as Georgetown, Ipoh, Malacca, Kota Kinabalu and Kuching, I do feel sorry for you all.
So much for the slogan lies that lauds:
Tiada Terpinggir, Tiada Tertinggal
Till now 1.4 million(1.377million ending 2012) out of 29 million* only subscribed to the HSBB project.
What does that translate to? Around only 4.8% benefited from it?
So is 95.2% Tertinggal?
*http://www.indexmundi.com/malaysia/population.html - 29,179,952 (July 2012 est.)
1) Tellabs braces for FTTP(GPON) sales drop-off
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Tellabs reported a 13% year-over-year revenue decline in the fourth quarter but warned of a greater drop to come, predicting first-quarter revenue to be down 19% to 26% from a year earlier, to between $345 million and $375 million.
The biggest single driver of that revenue drop is an anticipated decline in sales of optical network terminals (ONTs), the customer premises gear in fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) networks, Tellabs said. Last April, the vendor opted to walk away from a contract to supply its biggest customer, Verizon Communications, with the next generation of FTTP gear: GPON. And six months later, Tellabs announced it was shifting development away from access equipment such as ONTs, whose thin, and sometimes non-existent, margins have long been a problem for Tellabs.
http://connectedplanetonline.com/residenti...ales-drop-0127/The biggest single driver of that revenue drop is an anticipated decline in sales of optical network terminals (ONTs), the customer premises gear in fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) networks, Tellabs said. Last April, the vendor opted to walk away from a contract to supply its biggest customer, Verizon Communications, with the next generation of FTTP gear: GPON. And six months later, Tellabs announced it was shifting development away from access equipment such as ONTs, whose thin, and sometimes non-existent, margins have long been a problem for Tellabs.
2) Experts say GPON has limited prospects in Russia due to high costs.
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Among the disadvantages of GPON technology, J'son & Partners Consulting named the high cost of the equipment, the need to build the entire network at once, and the relatively long payback period.
"We believe that a switch to GPON technology is unlikely to be widespread due to the high cost of the technology.
http://www.lightwaveonline.com/news/2013/0...high-costs.html"We believe that a switch to GPON technology is unlikely to be widespread due to the high cost of the technology.
Mar 20 2013, 02:09 PM, updated 13y ago
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