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LTE to Dominate $67B M2M Market in 2021 - Ovum

Ovum’s latest forecasts show that cellular machine-to-machine (M2M) connections (not including NB-IoT) will reach 733 million globally by 2021. Ovum predicts that total cellular M2M service revenues will reach a global annual total of $67bn in 2021. 

The greatest value contributions will come from Asia & Oceania, North America and Western Europe, worth US$ 22bn, US$ 16bn and US$14bn, respectively. Many wireless carriers will attempt to maximize their revenue opportunity by extending themselves beyond connectivity, to which end Ovum also forecasts the proportion of revenue that carriers can expect from the various M2M service layers.

Of all current generation of mobile technologies, Ovum said LTE will be dominant in the long term, accounting for 212 million connections in 2021. LTE is an exciting technology for machine communications, because unlike 2G and 3G it is “tunable.” In 2021, 2G and 4G will be at a point of parity, while 3G will account for 172 million connections. Yet, by this time, 2G and 3G will be plateauing, while LTE will be firmly in ascendance.

Ovum forecasts that global cellular M2M connections will reach 733 million in 2021. This equates to approximately 8.1 percent of all forecasted cellular connections, up from 4.2 percent in 2015. During the five-year forecast period, total M2M service revenues will grow at a CAGR of 13.3% to reach a global annual total of $67bn in 2021. Service revenues will grow at the fastest rate in the later-to-start markets of the Middle East and Africa, where the CAGR for the region will be 16.7%.

Although both 2G and LTE are forecast to have approximately 212 million M2M connections by 2021, 2G like 3G will be plateauing with LTE firmly in ascendance. The increasingly competitive nature of the M2M market demands forecasts with greater segmentation and more accuracy, said Ovum

Jamie Moss, Principal Analyst in IoT & Ovum’s M2M expert 
Machine-type connections need to stay alive for many years and are not transitioned to new air interfaces as a matter of course. Doing so breaks the economics of deploying fully autonomous nodes. Instead, M2M contracts typically reach the end-of-life stage before any migration occurs.

Pauline Trotter, Practice Leader for Ovum
Large carrier groups with established M2M businesses will not seek to switch off 2G until 2020 – and for some this will not be until 2025. But this decision is not merely for the sake of legacy support: 2G M2M connections will continue to be added, because 2G still represents the most affordable and internationally available form of coverage.

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Ray is a news editor at The Fast Mode, bringing with him more than 10 years of experience in the wireless industry.

For tips and feedback, email Ray at ray.sharma(at)thefastmode.com, or reach him on LinkedIn @raysharma10, Facebook @1RaySharma

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