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Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Commoditization of 5G Spreads to High Data Plans in Some European Markets


by Will Watts


As mobile carriers fight to differentiate their services and maintain prices, a key target area has always been high data volume 5G plans. Most mobile operators have long projected that this premium segment would be the least sensitive to downward pricing pressure, given that these customers tend to be wealthier and, due to their heavy phone usage, would be more aware of the differences between providers and mobile service tiers. In short, if operators could charge a premium to any customer group, these would be the ones.


While it is still early in the process, there is mounting evidence that even this strategy may not overcome the general trend towards commoditization facing the mobile industry. Currently, in its studies of 5G pricing, Tarifica categorizes the top segment of mobile consumers – the “super users” – as 100GB a month of mobile data (though there are some even heavier users, these represent a minuscule portion of the market). In just the last quarter, operators in Belgium, Ireland, Spain, and, particularly, Poland all significantly reduced prices for this group. If these pricing trends persist and are replicated in other countries, these “super users” will become just another market segment where operators face declining margins over time.
An Instructive Example: 20GB Plans in Germany


Looking back, it was not too long ago that 20GB per month of high-speed data was considered heavy usage, with consumers in this segment being viewed as the key to future growth for operators. However, across multiple markets, prices for this segment have fallen substantially as operators have felt pressure to offer ever more data for similar prices.


For example, even in Germany—a market traditionally known for higher costs and where operators have more pricing power—the prices for 20+GB of 5G data have fallen dramatically in the past year (see chart below).



       



While some operators were able to maintain their prices over the year, most saw significant declines. Just as concerning as these declines is the fact that prices across all providers now appear to be largely converging, much as they would for a commodity market. If this trend holds, then there is little reason not to expect this “race to the bottom” to continue across more user types in 2024-25.
The Next Domino to Fall: 100GB Plans
In the past quarter, Tarifica’s researchers have identified increasing activity in the 100+GB space. Across Europe, operators have been launching new offers targeting these users, raising the data volumes of existing plans to this level, or discounting their highest volume offerings. Collectively, these actions have driven down prices for this user group quite meaningfully.


The most noteworthy example of this trend was Poland, where three operators – Play, Orange, and Netia – all saw prices drop by an average of more than 37% (see chart below).
Chart created using data from Tarifica’s Telecom Pricing Intelligence Platform
 



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