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AT&T Announces US$14 Billion Commitment with Ericsson for Open RAN |
NEWS |
The year 2023 has seen the telecoms industry endure a revenue crisis, with 3Q 2023 financial statements for both Ericsson and Nokia reporting between a 10% and 20% Year-over-Year (YoY) decline in net organic sales. This is also related to the overall 5G market slowdown due to inventory corrections and slowed operator spending. Despite this, governments and vendors have not wavered in their agenda to develop fully disaggregated Open Radio Access Network (RAN) networks that will be deployed in large-scale, nationwide deployments. A number of trials and Proofs of Concept (PoCs) were seen in 2023, with Europe being quite entrenched in these, and Open RAN deployment announcements have begun.
In December 2023, Ericsson and AT&T announced a US$14 billion multi-year joint commitment to deploy fully integrated Open RAN sites starting in 2024, in collaboration with Fujitsu. This announcement represents AT&T moving away from Nokia, choosing Ericsson as its primary equipment supplier for 5G networks, with a target of having 70% of its wireless traffic going through these sites by 2026. For Ericsson, this news solidifies its stronghold on the North American RAN market, with other operators such as Verizon also choosing it for radio equipment.
Could the Open RAN Market Become Fragmented? |
IMPACT |
Regional vendor dominance is to be expected in the 5G market. Huawei and ZTE dominate the Chinese and African markets, Ericsson and Nokia are both strong forces in Europe, and Fujitsu and Samsung dominate the Japanese and South Korean markets. The AT&T and Ericsson announcement highlights a pivotal movement in the Open RAN market, where a Tier One operator with an existing mature network has assigned a nationwide Open RAN contract to a Tier One vendor. Details of the contract are not yet available, but it appears as if Ericsson will perform a nearly End-to-End (E2E) system deployment, an antithesis to the Open RAN philosophy of a more diverse supply chain. This may lead to Open RAN being dominated by Tier One vendors, eventually leading to fragmentation. One part of the market, namely brownfield operators, may choose to partner with Tier One vendors like Ericsson, whereas more bold operators may partner with diverse, best-of-breed vendors. This could have significant consequences on the future of Open RAN:
The Time for Open RAN Is Now |
RECOMMENDATIONS |
Whether fragmentation occurs or not, this news from AT&T is a critical moment for the Open RAN market, a marquee Open RAN win in the U.S. market. This signals that open architecture adoption is quickly shifting phases from the trial and PoC stage into mainstream deployments by major operators. The size of the deal gives the entire Open RAN ecosystem a boost toward escaping “niche” status and the industry should expect increased innovation funding and commitments across the vendor ecosystem. Vendors must work quickly to position themselves to gain market traction and support growing demand:
Finally, this AT&T announcement serves as a blow to Nokia, with some estimating that their previous deal with AT&T accounted for 8% of their revenue. Nokia can still expect continued growth prospects, but not as rapidly as Ericsson can expect; therefore, Nokia must work quickly to prove its Open RAN capabilities and prevent any further perception slide.