Future mobiles will cost consumers US$150B

By Jo Best, Special to ZDNet Asia
Thursday, February 01, 2007 11:09 AM

With the average handset becoming ever more high-end, there will be more cash sunk into content and services by consumers--up to US$150 bllion by 2011, analysts believe.

Messaging, including IM, email and old favourite SMS, will still make up the bulk of revenues - 67 per cent - but entertainment will emerge as the young pretender as consumers rush to spend their cash on games, gambling, personalisation and adult content. Mobile entertainment will be worth to US$38.12 billion in 2011, up from US$18.84 bllion in 2006.

Mobile music will begin to realise its potential as higher speed third-generation (3G) and high speed downlink packet access (HSDPA) networks become more widespread, although the analysts warn the industry will need to rethink its approach.

Nick Lane, principal analyst at Informa, told silicon.com: "DRM will be critical. If the industry wants us to start using more content, it needs to start thinking like the retailers. If I buy a towel from Debenhams, they don't tell me I can use it once a month. [The industry] needs to be more logical."

Other emerging services will start to make their mark although their impact is likely to remain small, including mobile user-generated content, payments and TV.

Mobile payments, including NFC, will remain the cash cow of the newbies, generating US$359 million by 2011--although most of the revenues will come from the Asia Pacific region where the technology is already in widespread use.

Lane said: "In Japan, the phone has almost become a mobile wallet, primarily because of cultural difference because credit card adoption and uptake is very low. In Europe, it's a long way off--credit cards are entrenched."

Jo Best of Silicon.com reported from London.


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NFC or Not NFC

In the last 2 paragraphs of your article there is a slight misunderstanding. NFC is a technology being standardized by the NFC Forum (www.nfc-forum.org) which in trial in many areas of the world. The system already deployed in Japan is not, and is unlikely to be compatible with the NFC standard as it uses a proprietary technology from Sony called FeliCa. Both of these two technolgies have promising futures in their respective and distinct geographical areas.

"Mobile payments, including NFC, will remain the cash cow of the newbies, generating US$359 million by 2011 - although most of the revenues will come from the Asia Pacific region where the technology is already in widespread use.

Lane said: "In Japan, the phone has almost become a mobile wallet, primarily because of cultural difference because credit card adoption and uptake is very low. In Europe, it's a long way off--credit cards are entrenched.""
Posted by Tim Baker on Tuesday, February 06 2007 06:18 AM


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