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Telecom firms aim to shrug off slump at annual get-together

BARCELONA (AFP) – Telecom companies will aim to put a positive spin on their current slump in fortunes when they gather in the Spanish city of Barcelona on Monday for the annual Mobile World Congress (MWC), the biggest event in the industry’s calendar.

Demand for products including smartphones has fallen with the onset of a global economic slowdown and rising inflation, bringing tough times to companies all along the supply chain.

But industry body GSMA, which organises the MWC, said this year’s event would be buoyed by the return of Chinese delegates after Beijing finally lifted Covid-era travel restrictions.

Roughly 80,000 people are expected in Barcelona to see the latest innovations and ideas from giants of the sector like Samsung, Huawei, Nokia and Ericsson.

The bosses of network operators like Vodafone, Orange, China Mobile and Deutsche Telekom will also give high-profile speeches.

The GSMA is attempting to push a forward-looking agenda filled with much-hyped concepts like artificial intelligence, 6G and Internet of Things.

But many of the companies at the show will be focussed on the bread-and-butter issue of how to make money in tricky financial times.

The wider tech sector has been routed recently and giants like Meta and Google have shed thousands of jobs. Although telecom companies have not faced the same pain, Ericsson announced last week that 1,400 staff would lose their jobs.

One of the chief concerns for operators is getting a return on their huge investment in 5G networks.

An idea long promoted by these firms is for bandwidth-hungry businesses like Netflix and Google to pay a premium to the network operators.

The European Union launched a public consultation on the issue on Thursday.

“What they are proposing to do is really to change the economics of the internet,” said Dario Talmesio of analyst firm Omdia.

He said it was ambitious but telecom firms had “an unprecedented level of political support” right now, largely because of the unpopularity of United States (US) big tech firms in Europe.

The focus for consumer brands is on shifting more units, with overall sales of smartphones last year slumping by 11.3 per cent compared with 2021, according to the IDC consultancy.

“The market suffered a lot last year,” said Thomas Husson from analyst firm Forrester. As well as a wider economic malaise, he said consumers in Western Europe and other “mature” markets were simply holding on to their smartphones for much longer than before – a major headache for manufacturers.

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