International data and structuring ownership of submarine cables Rory Macmillan Partner, Macmillan Keck 2016 Digital Thailand Bangkok 26 May 2016 MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors The theme of this presentation is how careful structuring of ownership of submarine cables may help the supply of low cost international data (a crucial input for Thailand’s digital economy) MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Contents • Demand • Supply • Structuring ownership MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Contents • Demand • Supply • Structuring ownership MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Penetration rates are still rising and have scope for further increase in Asia-Pacific, including Thailand GSMA MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Smartphone penetration is rising quickly – of 5.5 billion mobile users expected worldwide by 2020, 50% are expected to be using smartphones CISCO 2016 VNI Asia Pacific GSMA GSMA MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors The combination of rising smartphone penetration, bandwidth-intensive services (particularly video), and increasing access network capacity (particularly LTE), are expected to produce 46% CAGR in mobile traffic consumption to 2020 Global Asia Pacific Content of mobile traffic Average mobile data traffic consumption Average mobile data speeds CISCO 2016 Visual Network Index MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Much of the growth in consumption of data is driven by content and other ‘over the top’ (OTT) players, which are location-independent, attracting millions of customers on a global scale, and growing fast The global OTT market is expected to grow from USD 28 billion in 2015 to USD 62 billion by 2020, at an estimated CAGR of 17.2% Key drivers: • adoption of device-based computing • growth in demand for content • increase in requirement for compliance and verification • increase in wide availability of broadband infrastructure • personalization of technology MarketsandMarkets, Detecon MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Content and other OTT players place major demands on telecom networks, with real-time entertainment dominating bandwidth consumption and file sharing remaining strong in Asia Pacific Sandvine Online non-linear media Sandvine E-commerce and platforms ‘Freemium’ VoIP providers Social networks and messaging MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Contents • Demand • Supply • Structuring ownership MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors The radio access network is crucial for delivery of high speed mobile access, as is the backbone network Thailand is taking significant steps to make spectrum available for LTE to build on its already high 3G coverage (97% population) • 1800 MHz LTE auction in Nov 2015 for US$ 2.25 bn for two licences • 900 MHz LTE auction in Dec 2015 for US$ 4.2 bn for two licences (second one re-bid) • 2600 MHz band coming available mid 2017 as MCOT spectrum is refarmed • 1500 MHz possibly coming available 2020, if refarmed from TOT GSMA MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors International bandwidth supply is growing, including in Asia-Pacific Telegeography • Growth in use of international capacity is being driven by content providers (e.g., Google, Microsoft, Facebook) • These use about half of used capacity on the intra-Asian and trans-Pacific routes • Growth in private networks is nearly twice growth in internet capacity MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors An increase in supply of international bandwidth is needed in much of Asia-Pacific MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors After a slowdown, submarine cable construction is surging, with new cables being launched shortly 33 new cables (worth over US$8 bn) are expected to launch, ready for service (RFS) in the next three years, including in Asia-Pacific Telegeography MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Just as with the trend in capacity purchase, content and other OTT players are increasingly investing in submarine cables • Content providers may act as anchor investors and consortium members in submarine cable systems • Eventually, they may build their own private cables (e.g., Google’s plan to build the Junior cable between Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro in 2017) Investments in the Unity and Southeast Asia Japan Cable systems and the planned FASTER and Monet cables Investment in the planned Asia Pacific Gateway consortium cable Member of the New Cross Pacific consortium cable and a major capacity customer on Hibernia Express and the AEConnect cables MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors In addition to new-build, technology is multiplying capacity, creating extensive unexploited capacity in many countries • Technological advances have multiplied capacity by 10+ (e.g., from 10 to 100 Gbps) • There remains substantial unused capacity available over existing cables Telegeography MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Long-haul capacity prices are falling mainly due to cheaper transmission equipment that increases supply and reduces the cost per bit both in capex and opex Telegeography • In the global market, prices are reducing commensurate with growth in demand • Median 10 Gbps prices of key global routes declined CAGR -25% 2012 – 2015 • Major variations in price declines and price levels still exist • Los Angeles-Sydney = 4.3 x Los AngelesTokyo • Miami-São Paulo = 5.4 x London-NY MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Thailand’s demand is bumping up against its existing supply of submarine cable capacity, and its challenge is to ensure supply of sufficient capacity and to pass declining international prices through to consumers Existing CAT cables • TIS (Thailand Indonesia Singapore) • SEA-ME-WE 3 (93 countries to Europe) • SEA-ME-WE 4 (15 countries to Europe) • AAG (Asia-America Gateway 8 Asian countries plus USA) Planned cables (with limited regional connections) • MCT (Malaysia-Cambodia-Thailand) Ready for Service (RFS) Q4 2016 (Symphony & DTAC as Thai members) • MYTHIC (Myanmar-Malaysia-Thailand Interconnect) RFS April 2017 (Campana Group) • JSC (South-East Asia Japan Cable) has option to connect to Thailand (TOT as Thai member) CAT MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Thailand’s many internet links to foreign countries should enable competition in Internet bandwidth, but upstream concentration of control/market power over submarine cables may impede competitive pressure on prices Nectec MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Contents • Demand • Supply • Structuring ownership MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Ownership and financing of submarine cables can be structured in various ways to reduce cost, control risk and accelerate rollout Consortium • Historically ‘club’ of incumbent operators for their own purposes • TIS (Thailand Indonesia Singapore) – CAT as Thai member • SEA-ME-WE 3 (93 countries to Europe) – CAT as Thai member • SEA-ME-WE 4 (15 countries to Europe) – CAT as Thai member • AAG (Asia-America Gateway) – CAT as Thai member • MCT (Malaysia-Cambodia-Thailand) – DTAC as Thai member (Ready for Service Q4 2016) • APCN2 (10 countries in Asia-Pacific) Private • Allocation of Minimum Investment Units (MIUs) or Minimum Assignable Units (MAUs) according to participation, discounting for amount invested • Specialist and large international players, carrier neutral or for own-purposes • MCS Singapore-Jakarta – owned by Matrix Cable System • JAKABARE Singapore-Indonesia – owned by Indosat • JASUKA Indonesia-Singapore-Malaysia – owned by Telkom Indonesia Project finance • Development financial institutions (DFIs) • Loans, guarantees, equity • Export credit agencies Vendor financing • Competitive feature offered by vendors • Delays/reduces CAPEX cost • Lighter burden than debt financing Pre-sales, down payments • Sales of IRUs rather than leases • Reduces upfront financing costs PPP • Government participating as consortium member, anchor customer, subsidy provider • Public sector involvement facilitates approvals, reduces political and regulatory risk • Private sector involvement improves financing costs and reduces operational risk MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors The domestic regulatory framework influences the speed of deployment and the commercial opportunity presented by the submarine cable, and can aim to reduce cost through competition or regulation of market power Non-telecom rights and permits • Rights of way • Municipal construction and land permits • Environmental permits and cost/benefit studies • Defence and security approvals Telecommunications licensing • Licence to provide telecommunications service (if for public use) • Special cable landing licence in some cases Telecommunications regulations •Interconnection obligations •Essential facilities and open access requirements •Reasonable and non-discriminatory pricing and other terms & conditions •Reference offer obligations •Colocation obligations (space, power, access) In Thailand: • Prices per Mb remain 3 x Singapore • NBTC is considering regulating submarine cable capacity prices • But is there scope for competition to reduce prices? • Consider whether ownership and governance structures may better serve policy objectives than behavioural regulation of reasonable and non-discriminatory terms and prices MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Ownership and governance models affect competition and investment (1) Option 1 – Business as Usual (BAU)* • Market player as landing party • Landing party offers wholesale to other operators by contract • Other operators do not have an ownership interest • Landing party entity is a profit centre Retail market Retail market Operators Contract rights to capacity *Typical in most markets Landing party entity Capacity rights Risk of rent seeking by the landing party and conflict of interest between landing party entity’s shareholders and nonshareholder customers may hinder competition and result in higher prices MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Ownership and governance models affect competition and investment (1) Option 2 – Wholesale only provider (WHOP) • • • • Wholesale only provider Contract rights for all operators Operators have no ownership interest Landing party entity is a profit centre Retail market Operators *Developing model where cables are held by international wholesale players Contract rights to capacity Landing party entity Success of the model depends on having multiple submarine landing stations with multiple landing parties to ensure wholesale competition Capacity rights MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Ownership and governance models affect competition and investment (3) Option 3 – Family and Friends (FAF) Retail market • Operator consortium owns the landing party entity • Landing party entity sells capacity to owners (and other operators) • Landing party entity is a profit centre Retail market Other providers Operator investors Contract rights to capacity Ownership rights (shares) Contract rights to capacity *Increasingly used, e.g., Mauritania’s ACE landing station Landing party entity Capacity rights Landing party entity remains a profit centre with risk of rent seeking. Conflict of interest for landing party entity between its shareholders and other providers. The risk can be mitigated through non-discrimination obligations if the monitoring and enforcement regulatory regime is strong. MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Ownership and governance models affect competition and investment (4) Retail market Option 4 – Keck Cooperative (KECO)* • Cooperative model • Equity ownership interest with direct capacity rights • Landing party entity is merely a cost centre *Conceived by Richard Keck for ACE cable landing stations in West Africa Retail market Other providers Contract rights to capacity in a competitive wholesale market in international capacity Operator investors Cooperative ownership in landing party entity combined with corresponding rights to its capacity Landing party entity Capacity rights Where there are few cables and landing stations, competition is inbuilt into the ownership, enabling competitive wholesale and retail markets MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors A variety of options are available, some more suited to others depending on the circumstances and objectives MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors Conclusions • Globally, technology, markets and consumer behaviour are driving a rapid growth in demand for bandwidth, particularly international data (which can also be expected in Thailand) • Access network LTE technologies and 4G frequencies are enabling supply of bandwidth for these services over mobile broadband networks (including in Thailand) • Submarine cable networks are racing to ensure that the supply of international capacity keeps up with this growing demand through investment in new cables and technology improvements that multiply capacity of existing cables (less so in Thailand) • Prices of long-haul data in the international market continue to drop as supply keeps up with demand (from which Thailand could benefit) • However, the structure of the domestic submarine cable market is key to ensuring that the benefits of higher supply, greater efficiency and lower prices are passed through to consumers (a problem facing Thailand) • Bottlenecks over international capacity in the domestic market can be addressed through ownership and governance, enabling competition and pass-through of lower prices for consumers (including in Thailand) • Thailand may benefit from reviewing ownership and governance structures of submarine cables MACMILLAN KECK Attorneys & Solicitors