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Wireless value added services in China are set to grow almost 50 per cent in the next three years
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China's millions flock to mobile music and TV

Market to generate $11.5bn by 2010

Simon Burns in Taipei, vnunet.com 12 Jan 2007
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Revenues from China's use of text messaging, ring-tones, music downloads and games will grow almost 50 per cent in the next three years, generating $11.5bn by 2010.

The forecasts from UK-based research consultancy Ovum indicate the growing importance in China of wireless value added services (WVAS). 

WVAS describes a range of mobile download and information services other than person-to-person voice communications.

"Messaging will continue to dominate the WVAS sector, contributing to over 63 per cent of total value added services revenues in 2010," said Kevin Lee, a Hong Kong-based senior analyst with Ovum.

Messaging, personalisation and alerts services currently account for the majority of WVAS revenues in China, but mobile music, games and TV are beginning to grow in importance.

"The growth of the WVAS market in China will be driven by the latest change of value added services policy, the availability of converged terminals, strong economic growth, rising customer awareness and demand, and increasing foreign investment," said Lee.

Ovum also predicts that new network access technologies such as 3G and WiMax may also encourage growth in the services market.

However, WiMax is in its infancy, even in early-adopter nations like Korea, and 3G services have still not been deployed in China. Recent local media reports suggest that the government could delay the issue of 3G licences until 2008.

While the 3G roll-out schedule is of critical importance for China's network operators and handset vendors, opinions differ over its real effect on the value-added services market, whatever the impact market sentiment has on service providers' share prices.

"We are neutral on 3G as we believe that the new standard provides greater bandwidth, but is unlikely to change the commoditised applications offered by the [WVAS] aggregators [i.e. ring tones, games, and wallpaper]," wrote analysts James Lee and Xiaofan Zhang of WR Hambrecht & Co

Many believe that 3G is a catalyst for mobile content aggregators in China, as the standard will enable new applications while adding new carriers that will offer mobile content.

"With the issuance of [3G] licences possibly being delayed by a year, we believe this catalyst could be diminished in the near-term," said the Hambrecht analysts.

See also:

BaiduSoftware giant concedes defeat for its own paid search efforts in China  18 Dec 2006
Skype100,000 new users a day, according to local partner  13 Nov 2006
Mobile phoneCustomer service crackdown hurts value-added services providers  10 Nov 2006
China had more than 431 million mobile phone users by the end of JulyGrowth slowing as market waits for 3G  23 Aug 2006
Mobile phone users in most Asia-Pacific countries are content to use basic messaging and voice servicesCheaper and easier, say three-quarters of users  20 Jul 2006
Hong Kong is readying its first anti-spam laws, promising fines and long prison terms for serious offendersTen year jail terms for online fraudsters  07 Jul 2006
EBay's consumer auctions in China continue to lose market share despite now being free of chargeNo increase in consumer-to-consumer sales despite free service  16 Jun 2006
China's largest mobile telecoms service providers are expanding into new markets and cutting into the business of smaller playersEnd of easy pickings for value added service providers  13 Jun 2006
vnunet.com Asia news wrap: China gets RIM's BlackBerry at last; Japan rolls out fuel-cell powered train; Former HP boss Fiorina joins TSMC; Japan's server market soarsService will operate in cooperation with China Mobile  07 Apr 2006
China's 3G introduction is expected to generate $12bn in spending on equipmentNetwork operators are ready to launch WCDMA services, but the Chinese government wants to roll out its home-grown TD-SCDMA first  24 Feb 2006

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