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Satnews Daily
May 21st, 2018

ResearchAndMarkets.com's Assessment of the Current Dynamics for Pricing FSS Capacity


Recently added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's reports now available is "FSS Capacity Pricing Trends: An Assessment of the Current Dynamics for the Pricing of Satellite Capacity". FSS Capacity Pricing Trends considers a set of regional markets, together with a specific review of the mobility and government vertical markets.

With the combination of oversupply from the addition of traditional satellite capacity in certain areas along with the unrelenting rollouts of HTS capacity has resulted in new pricing references in most geographies and market segments across the FSS sector. While data-oriented markets have been the most exposed, with double-digit capacity pricing declines over the last 2-3 years, video applications have also been impacted. Other factors have included consolidation among service companies in certain segments, resulting in larger capacity buyers with more bargaining power, and heightened competition from a growing pool of national satellite operators.

While prices lower than $1,000/MHz/month have been reported, even for traditional (regular) capacity, in some geographies or use cases, prices of up to $7,000 can still be found. Still, reference regular capacity pricing has now fallen below $2,500 for data applications in nearly all regions, while pricing for HTS capacity primarily stands between $100-$500/Mbps/month, with the exception of certain premium services.

The market could see a continuous erosion in the average revenue per capacity unit being sold (ARPU), even if (spot) pricing partly stabilizes. In the longer term, the availability of VHTS systems, with capacity in the range of several hundred Gbps of capacity supply to 1Tbps, and of NGSO constellations will likely have a new impact on pricing, defining new reference rates. Still, such systems would only cause progressive impacts as most systems would be deployed after 2020.

FSS Capacity Pricing Trends provides an assessment of current dynamics for the pricing of satellite capacity, in a context of sustained technology innovation and additional satellite capacity associated with new generation satellites. The report includes coverage of nine regional markets, together with a specific review of the mobility and government vertical markets.