美国通信行业研究报告(英文版).pdf48简介开始 The Wall Street Journal, on July 25, 2001, stated that “The impact [of the Telecom bust] reverberates far beyond telecom carriers and their equipment suppliers, down through a food chain that reaches into almost every corner of the economy.” Certainly, the last year has seen a serious contraction in stock valuations throughout the telecom universe, from service providers to equipment and component vendors. Each of the past three quarters has produced a flood of negative earnings announcements, write-offs, and layoffs. Like all rapid and wide-ranging industry and economic shifts, the “Telecom Crash” gives rise to more questions than answers. How did it happen? Where is the industry now? How wide are the effects? When will it be over? Which companies and technologies will emerge and who will come out ahead? Over the past several months, a joint team of analysts from McKinsey and Goldman Sachs have examined these questions to gain context and perspective on the current communications infrastructure slowdown and life beyond for equipment, component, and Operational Support Systems (OSS) vendors. This team arrived at the following conclusions and strategies for success. Key Conclusions 1. The current equipment industry slowdown has not been caused by a falloff in actual bandwidth demand (versus ebullient demand forecasts) from enterprises and other end-users, but rather by supply-side factors such as over-building by carriers, over-manufacturing by vendors, and over-capitalization by financial markets, coupled with unrealistic market expectations. 2. We expect sales of equipment to be impacted for one to two years in long-haul and less than six months in metro transport markets, driven primarily by the time it will take to absorb installed overcapacity. In that time, excess inventories should be consumed and distressed assets redeploye 美国通信行业研究报告(英文版).pdf48简介结束,下载后阅读全部内容 |