"In many markets it looks as if fixed voice is going to suffer not the slow and lingering decline many have predicted, but a rather rapid one," says report co-author, Dr Alastair Brydon. "At the current rate of traffic migration, 90% of all voice minutes in Finland will originate on mobile phones by 2008."
Key findings from the new report include:
- In five Western European markets, more voice minutes originate on mobile networks than on traditional voice and broadband networks combined.
- VoIP appears to have little impact on the migration of voice traffic to mobile networks. Paradoxically, it appears to release consumer cash for additional spending on mobile services.
- Finland had the highest level of fixed-mobile traffic substitution in Western Europe in the fourth quarter of 2005 - mobile-originated calls accounted for 64.6% of voice traffic. However, the country also experienced the greatest increase in this proportion during 2006, by 10 percentage points, to reach 74.6% in the fourth quarter of 2006.
- Traffic substitution is also progressing rapidly in markets that have previously undergone little FMS. Germany has experienced much less traffic substitution than the Western European average; only 17.5% of its voice traffic originated on mobile phones in the fourth quarter of 2005. However, this proportion increased by 6.8 percentage points - one of the highest increases in Western Europe - to reach 24.3% in the fourth quarter of 2006.
"The widespread introduction of home-zone tariffs in Germany is having a significant effect, which demostrates that mobile operators' actions can significantly increase usage," says co-author Dr Mark Heath. "Following years of usage stagnation, average outgoing mobile voice usage per subscriber increased by 23% during 2006."
"What is particularly worrying for fixed-line operations is not that FMS is happening, but the pace at which it is happening," adds Rupert Wood, principal analyst at Analysys Research. "Of course, fixed-network operators are looking to different sources of revenue for growth, but the accelerating decline in core voice revenue is damaging at a time when they are embarking on long and expensive next-generation network re-engineering programmes."