Last month, CI&M's co-publication in Endeavor Business Media, Broadband Technology Report, sat down for a Zoom interview with Dell'Oro Group vice president Jeff Heynen, renowned market analyst for the broadband access and home networking industries. This episode of The Cabling Podcast delivers the audio from that talk, as we seek to give our audience of information and communications technology (ICT) vendors, contractors, and installers the benefit of Heynen's view into the current broadband access market, particularly in the areas of HFC and pure fiber-optic connectivity deployments.
Heynen joined Dell'Oro Group in 2018, and is responsible for the technology market research firm's Broadband Access and Home Networking program. Prior to Dell’Oro Group, he spent over 12 years in broadband and video industry analysis, working with S&P Global Market Intelligence, Infonetics Research and IHS Markit as a research director focused on the broadband access and video segments. Heynen’s research and analysis have been cited in leading trade and business publications including the Wall Street Journal, SDxCentral, Multi-Channel News, New York Times, Light Reading, Los Angeles Times, Investor’s Business Daily, FierceWireless, and Barron’s. He has also appeared as a perennial invited speaker at numerous telecom industry conferences.
Our interview is based on information from Heynen's blog published by Dell'Oro this winter, where he forthrightly predicts that the broadband access and home networking market will remain resilient in 2023. As stated by Heynen in the blog:
"For mature markets, is rare to see consecutive years of double-digit revenue growth. But that is indeed what has occurred, as 2021 revenue growth was 16% and 2022 growth over 2021 is currently expected to be around 12%, reaching just over $18 billion worldwide ... In 2023, albeit nowhere near the double-digit percentage growth we have seen over the last two years...at this point, it is safe to [forecast] 5-7% revenue growth ... Though slower, the revenue growth this year shows the continued emphasis on expanding and improving broadband network capacity by operators, as well as state and national governments."
To begin our interview, Heynen (00:46) is asked by senior editor Matt Vincent to recap his assessment of 2022 in the context of cable MSOs’ broadband initiatives. "There's been a clear focus on fiber investments," he says. "When you talk specifically about [traditional] cable operators, they too are making their own investments in fiber infrastructure, albeit quietly. We're seeing a very steady rise in the purchase of remote OLT modules to be placed in existing optical node locations to start peeling off fiber subscribers in competitive areas and in markets where it makes sense to begin offering fiber services, particularly in new build scenarios. "
Asked about expectations regarding what cable MSOs will do this year (02:42), Heynen adds, "They're going to start preparing their outside plants to support the DOCSIS 4.0 upgrade cycle. The DOCSIS 3.1 mid-split and high-split initiatives to allocate more upstream bandwidth to subscribers, that's certainly going to occupy most of their time this year. We also have smaller cable operators that are converting and cutting over to fiber, in addition to also doing mid-splits and high-splits where it makes sense."
In terms of what challenges cable MSOs and BSPs may face as they attempt to reach these goals (04:11), Heynen remarks, "I think for emerging fiber providers and those that are still in the midst of rolling out fiber, labor shortages are still going to be a challenge, as are supply chain issues."
Whereas his blog indicated that there’s a feeling among some on Wall Street that fiber technology is obviating traditional HFC (06:20), when asked what cable operators might do to shift such a perception, Heynen notes, "Just because a competitor comes in with a supposedly better technological option, doesn't necessari
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